Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Assessing stigma

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Assessing stigma: Health and social worker regard towards working with people using illicit drugs in Athens, Greece

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Assessing stigma: Health and social worker regard towards working with people using illicit drugs in Athens, Greece. / Temenos, Cristina; Koutlou, Aliki; Kyriakidou, Sotiria et al.
In: Harm Reduction Journal, Vol. 21, 175, 26.09.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Temenos C, Koutlou A, Kyriakidou S, Galanaki S. Assessing stigma: Health and social worker regard towards working with people using illicit drugs in Athens, Greece. Harm Reduction Journal. 2024 Sept 26;21:175. doi: 10.1186/s12954-024-01091-x

Author

Temenos, Cristina ; Koutlou, Aliki ; Kyriakidou, Sotiria et al. / Assessing stigma : Health and social worker regard towards working with people using illicit drugs in Athens, Greece. In: Harm Reduction Journal. 2024 ; Vol. 21.

Bibtex

@article{4af7544fcd5f43ddb79013869c28a7af,
title = "Assessing stigma: Health and social worker regard towards working with people using illicit drugs in Athens, Greece",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: After the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and resulting economic austerity, the rise in illicit drug use engendered an increased need for people who use drugs (PWUD) to access medical care, compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic. Research shows that perceptions of medical staff towards PWUD facilitate or act as a barrier to accessing health care. This study provides a better understanding of health and social work professionals' perceptions by assessing stigma levels towards PWUD in Athens, Greece.METHODS: This is a mixed-method study. It calculates the stigma score for professionals (n = 60) and the stigma score associated with specific drugs based on the Medical Condition Regard Scale through a quantitative analysis of responses to a semi-structured online survey about attitudes of health and social work professionals towards PWUD. It draws on the qualitative analysis of 12 semi-structured interviews with 16 service managers, providers, and health services advocates working in the charity sector to determine whether perceptions of PWUD affect writing and implementing policy and protocols for services.RESULTS: Stigma towards PWUD exists amongst health and social work professionals in Athens. Professionals who have worked with PWUD for longer periods of time, professionals who have had specific training on working with PWUD, and professionals who feel that they have the necessary training to work with PWUD all demonstrated a higher stigma score than those reporting the opposite. Cannabis and opioids were associated with lower stigma scores while shisha had the highest level of stigma associated with it. Finally, professional environments are not conducive to alleviating stigma as the lack of training specific to stigma, the lack of professional supervision, and worker burn-out are key barriers faced by professionals in their everyday practice.CONCLUSIONS: Reducing and eliminating stigma towards PWUD among health and social workers requires immediate action. Measures to be taken include: introducing training programs focused on stigma towards PWUD to healthcare providers, social workers, lawyers, police, the media; increasing professional supervision on field work for health and social workers; introducing low barrier health care and specialist units. Peers and field-focused organisations should meaningfully participate in drug and alcohol policymaking, program development, and implementation.",
author = "Cristina Temenos and Aliki Koutlou and Sotiria Kyriakidou and Sofia Galanaki",
year = "2024",
month = sep,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1186/s12954-024-01091-x",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
journal = "Harm Reduction Journal",
issn = "1477-7517",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Assessing stigma

T2 - Health and social worker regard towards working with people using illicit drugs in Athens, Greece

AU - Temenos, Cristina

AU - Koutlou, Aliki

AU - Kyriakidou, Sotiria

AU - Galanaki, Sofia

PY - 2024/9/26

Y1 - 2024/9/26

N2 - BACKGROUND: After the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and resulting economic austerity, the rise in illicit drug use engendered an increased need for people who use drugs (PWUD) to access medical care, compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic. Research shows that perceptions of medical staff towards PWUD facilitate or act as a barrier to accessing health care. This study provides a better understanding of health and social work professionals' perceptions by assessing stigma levels towards PWUD in Athens, Greece.METHODS: This is a mixed-method study. It calculates the stigma score for professionals (n = 60) and the stigma score associated with specific drugs based on the Medical Condition Regard Scale through a quantitative analysis of responses to a semi-structured online survey about attitudes of health and social work professionals towards PWUD. It draws on the qualitative analysis of 12 semi-structured interviews with 16 service managers, providers, and health services advocates working in the charity sector to determine whether perceptions of PWUD affect writing and implementing policy and protocols for services.RESULTS: Stigma towards PWUD exists amongst health and social work professionals in Athens. Professionals who have worked with PWUD for longer periods of time, professionals who have had specific training on working with PWUD, and professionals who feel that they have the necessary training to work with PWUD all demonstrated a higher stigma score than those reporting the opposite. Cannabis and opioids were associated with lower stigma scores while shisha had the highest level of stigma associated with it. Finally, professional environments are not conducive to alleviating stigma as the lack of training specific to stigma, the lack of professional supervision, and worker burn-out are key barriers faced by professionals in their everyday practice.CONCLUSIONS: Reducing and eliminating stigma towards PWUD among health and social workers requires immediate action. Measures to be taken include: introducing training programs focused on stigma towards PWUD to healthcare providers, social workers, lawyers, police, the media; increasing professional supervision on field work for health and social workers; introducing low barrier health care and specialist units. Peers and field-focused organisations should meaningfully participate in drug and alcohol policymaking, program development, and implementation.

AB - BACKGROUND: After the 2008 Global Financial Crisis and resulting economic austerity, the rise in illicit drug use engendered an increased need for people who use drugs (PWUD) to access medical care, compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic. Research shows that perceptions of medical staff towards PWUD facilitate or act as a barrier to accessing health care. This study provides a better understanding of health and social work professionals' perceptions by assessing stigma levels towards PWUD in Athens, Greece.METHODS: This is a mixed-method study. It calculates the stigma score for professionals (n = 60) and the stigma score associated with specific drugs based on the Medical Condition Regard Scale through a quantitative analysis of responses to a semi-structured online survey about attitudes of health and social work professionals towards PWUD. It draws on the qualitative analysis of 12 semi-structured interviews with 16 service managers, providers, and health services advocates working in the charity sector to determine whether perceptions of PWUD affect writing and implementing policy and protocols for services.RESULTS: Stigma towards PWUD exists amongst health and social work professionals in Athens. Professionals who have worked with PWUD for longer periods of time, professionals who have had specific training on working with PWUD, and professionals who feel that they have the necessary training to work with PWUD all demonstrated a higher stigma score than those reporting the opposite. Cannabis and opioids were associated with lower stigma scores while shisha had the highest level of stigma associated with it. Finally, professional environments are not conducive to alleviating stigma as the lack of training specific to stigma, the lack of professional supervision, and worker burn-out are key barriers faced by professionals in their everyday practice.CONCLUSIONS: Reducing and eliminating stigma towards PWUD among health and social workers requires immediate action. Measures to be taken include: introducing training programs focused on stigma towards PWUD to healthcare providers, social workers, lawyers, police, the media; increasing professional supervision on field work for health and social workers; introducing low barrier health care and specialist units. Peers and field-focused organisations should meaningfully participate in drug and alcohol policymaking, program development, and implementation.

UR - https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/614bfc56-ab45-4383-b7ae-7a4486e1c8aa

U2 - 10.1186/s12954-024-01091-x

DO - 10.1186/s12954-024-01091-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 39327583

VL - 21

JO - Harm Reduction Journal

JF - Harm Reduction Journal

SN - 1477-7517

M1 - 175

ER -