Published April 8, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

How do people who use opioids express their qualities and capacities? An assessment of attitudes, behaviors, and opportunities

  • 1. University of California, Berkeley
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. Cornell University
  • 4. New York University

Description

People who nonmedically use drugs (PWUD) face intricate social issues that suppress self-actualization, communal integration, and overall health and wellness. "Strengths-based" approaches, an under-used pedagogy and practice in addiction medicine, underscore the significance of identifying and recognizing the inherent and acquired skills, attributes, and capacities of PWUD. A strengths-based approach engenders client affirmation and improves their capacity to reduce drug use-related harms by leveraging existing capabilities. Exploring this paradigm, we conducted and analyzed interviews with 46 PWUD who were clients at syringe services programs in New York City and rural southern Illinois, two areas with elevated rates of opioid-related morbidity and mortality, to assess respondents' perceived strengths. We located two primary thematic modalities in which strengths-based ethos is expressed: individuals (1) being and advocate and resource for harm reduction knowledge and practices and (2) engaging in acts of continuous self-actualization. These dynamics demonstrate PWUD strengths populating and manifesting in complex ways that both affirm and challenge humanist and biomedical notions of individual agency, as PWUD refract enacted, anticipated, and perceived stigmas. In conclusion, programs that blend evidence-based, systems-level interventions on drug use stigma and disenfranchisement with meso and micro-level strengths-based interventions that affirm and leverage personal identity, decision-making capacity, and endemic knowledge may help disrupt health promotion cleavages among PWUD.

Files

How-do-people-who-use-opioids-express-their-qualities-and-capacities.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1186/s12954-024-00981-4
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:11526

Funding

National Institute on Drug Abuse
1UM1DA049394-01
National Institute on Drug Abuse
P30DA011041
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
UL1TR001445

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine