首页> 外文期刊>Harm Reduction Journal >Harm reduction, methadone maintenance treatment and the root causes of health and social inequities: An intersectional lens in the Canadian context
【24h】

Harm reduction, methadone maintenance treatment and the root causes of health and social inequities: An intersectional lens in the Canadian context

机译:减少伤害,美沙酮维持治疗以及健康和社会不平等的根本原因:在加拿大背景下的交叉镜头

获取原文
           

摘要

Background Using our research findings, we explore Harm Reduction and Methadone Maintenance Treatment (MMT) using an intersectional lens to provide a more complex understanding of Harm Reduction and MMT, particularly how Harm Reduction and MMT are experienced differently by people dependent on how they are positioned. Using the lens of intersectionality, we refine the notion of Harm Reduction by specifying the conditions in which both harm and benefit arise and how experiences of harm are continuous with wider experiences of domination and oppression; Methods A qualitative design that uses ethnographic methods of in-depth individual and focus group interviews and naturalistic observation was conducted in a large city in Canada. Participants included Aboriginal clients accessing mainstream mental health and addictions care and primary health care settings and healthcare providers; Results All client-participants had profound histories of abuse and violence, most often connected to the legacy of colonialism (e.g., residential schooling) and ongoing colonial practices (e.g., stigma & everyday racism). Participants lived with co-occurring illness (e.g., HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis C, PTSD, depression, diabetes and substance use) and most lived in poverty. Many participants expressed mistrust with the healthcare system due to everyday experiences both within and outside the system that further marginalize them. In this paper, we focus on three intersecting issues that impact access to MMT: stigma and prejudice, social and structural constraints influencing enactment of peoples' agency, and homelessness; Conclusions Harm reduction must move beyond a narrow concern with the harms directly related to drugs and drug use practices to address the harms associated with the determinants of drug use and drug and health policy. An intersectional lens elucidates the need for harm reduction approaches that reflect an understanding of and commitment to addressing the historical, socio-cultural and political forces that shape responses to mental illness/health, addictions, including harm reduction and methadone maintenance treatment.
机译:背景技术利用我们的研究结果,我们使用交叉透镜探索减少伤害和美沙酮维持治疗(MMT),以提供对减少伤害和MMT的更复杂的理解,特别是人们对减少伤害和MMT的看法取决于他们的位置。我们使用交叉性的镜头,通过指定危害和利益都产生的条件以及危害的经验如何在宽广的统治和压迫经验中连续的方式来完善减少危害的概念;方法在加拿大的一个大城市进行了定性设计,该设计使用人种学方法对个人和焦点小组进行了深入访谈和自然观察。参加者包括原住民客户,他们可获得主流的精神健康和成瘾护理,初级卫生保健设施和医疗保健提供者;结果所有与会人员都有深厚的虐待和暴力历史,通常与殖民主义的遗产(例如,住宿学校)和持续的殖民做法(例如,污名和日常种族主义)有关。参与者患有共同感染的疾病(例如,艾滋病毒/艾滋病,丙型肝炎,创伤后应激障碍,抑郁症,糖尿病和药物滥用),大多数人生活在贫困中。由于系统内外的日常经历进一步使他们边缘化,因此许多参与者对医疗系统表示不信任。在本文中,我们关注影响到MMT获取的三个相互交叉的问题:污名和偏见,影响人民代理机构制定的社会和结构性限制以及无家可归;结论减少危害必须超越对与毒品和毒品使用做法直接相关的危害的狭concern关注,以解决与毒品使用,毒品和健康政策的决定因素有关的危害。一个交叉镜头阐明了减少伤害的方法的必要性,这些方法反映出对解决影响精神疾病/健康,成瘾(包括减少伤害和美沙酮维持治疗)的反应的历史,社会文化和政治力量的理解和承诺。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号