Original research
par
Halvorsen Brenna, Ida et al
Date de publication
2021
Géographie
Norway
Langue de la ressource
English
Texte disponible en version intégrale
Oui
Open Access / OK to Reproduce
Non
Évalué par des pairs
Yes
L’objectif
Extended-release naltrexone (XR-NTX), an opioid antagonist, has demonstrated equal treatment outcomes, in terms of safety, opioid use, and retention, to the recommended OMT medication buprenorphine. However, premature discontinuation of XR-NTX treatment is still common and poorly understood. Research on patient experiences of XR-NTX treatment is limited. We sought to explore participants' experiences with discontinuation of treatment with XR-NTX, particularly motivation for XR-NTX, experiences of initiation and treatment, and rationale for leaving treatment.
Constatations/points à retenir
The research team identified three themes, and we present them as a chronological narrative: theme 1: Entering treatment – I thought I knew what I was going into; theme 2: Life with XR-NTX – I had something in me that I didn't want; and theme 3: Leaving treatment – I want to go somewhere in life. Patients' unfulfilled expectations of how XR-NTX would lead to a better life were central to decisions about discontinuation, including unexpected physical, emotional, or mental reactions as well as a lack of expected effects, notably some described an opioid effect from buprenorphine. A few participants ended treatment because they had reached their treatment goal, but most expressed disappointment about not achieving this goal. Some also expressed renewed acceptance of OMT. The participants' motivation for abstinence from illegal substances generally remained.
La conception ou méthodologie de recherche
Semi-structured interviews, n=13
Mots clés
About PWUD
Substitution/OAT