Date de publication
Géographie
Langue de la ressource
Texte disponible en version intégrale
Open Access / OK to Reproduce
Évalué par des pairs
L’objectif
This study examined whether an online training incorporating patient narratives reduced primary care clinicians' (PCCs) stigma toward people with opioid use disorder (primary) and increased intentions to treat people with OUD compared to an attention-control training (secondary).
Constatations/points à retenir
Stigma toward people with OUD may require more robust intervention than this brief training was able to accomplish. However, stigma was related to lower intentions to treat people with OUD, suggesting stigma acts as a barrier to care.
La conception ou méthodologie de recherche
88 PCCs (58% female; 68% white) completed the training (Stigma = 48; Control = 40) and were included in analyses.