Stigmas Surrounding Substance Use Disorder and the Effects on Healthcare
Healthcare-related stigma is considered particularly shameful, as it negatively affects people when they are seeking treatment and are most vulnerable — resulting in people not receiving the treatment they need. In addition to financial costs and a person’s geographic location where treatment is not always available, stigma is a leading reason people with substance use disorders do not seek and or receive medical attention. When addiction is not recognized as a medical condition, providers can be dismissive of people who have a substance use disorder.
Patients might be denied care when presenting to their emergency departments because they are perceived as problematic or drug-seeking. Staff might not feel obligated to care for people with substance use disorders because they believe it is not part of their job. Other stigma experiences in the healthcare environment include verbal or physical abuse and name-calling. Stigma may negatively affect clinical care when nursing care is limited to shorter visits, more task-oriented, or delegated to personnel who lack knowledge and adequate training.
The quality of nursing care might also be intentionally compromised by increasing patients’ wait times or delaying interventions. People with substance use disorders frequently feel written off or abandoned by healthcare staff and experience shame about their current or past substance use. As a result, they internalize that stigma and often refuse to return for care despite potentially severe health consequences. Those who have a substance abuse disorder will delay care or not disclose substance abuse to avoid experiencing stigmas.
When internalized, stigma results in painful social isolation, which worsens the disease. It creates missed opportunities not only to provide evidence-based treatment for substance use disorders but also to prevent and treat potential complications. People who experience stigma about their substance use are less likely to seek treatment, including treatment for other conditions, which results in significant economic, social, and medical costs. Knowledge deficits among healthcare professionals and nurses largely contribute to healthcare-related stigma.
Knowledge Deficits and Nurse Attitudes Affect Patients
Healthcare professionals, including nurses, often hold common misconceptions that addiction is a weakness, a lifestyle choice, or a moral failing, despite scientific evidence to support addiction as a complex brain disorder with behavioral components. People with substance use disorders are often blamed for their disease and perceived as being able to control their drug use when they cannot. These dangerous attitudes create barriers that prevent patients from receiving high-quality care.
Nurses frequently reported experiencing moral distress, burnout, and feelings of frustration and hostility when caring for people with substance use disorders, often describing them as defensive and challenging. Mutual mistrust and the need for more training and support are usually identified as critical challenges to caring for people with substance use disorders. These findings highlight an opportunity to facilitate a better understanding of patients to increase mutual engagement and care.
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