Abstract

BackgroundOpioid use remains a significant cause of harm to individual health. Perceived motives are of the main factors that help lead a patient into seeking treatment voluntarily to obviate that harm. The current study expands on the literature by exploring when and how male users of opioids become motivated to voluntarily seek treatment services.MethodsIn a qualitative study in Isfahan city from January 2018 to March 2019, 55 male participants who had already started a variety of treatment services to withdraw their dependence on opioids were recruited. Selection of participants was based on a maximum variation purposive sampling strategy. Each participant took part in a unstructured interview to identify his motives for seeking opioid use treatment. Interviews were undertaken in eight different treatment centers. An inductive thematic analysis method was used to analyze the interviews.ResultsThe findings highlight that Iranian male opioid users have different motivations to seek treatment. To be precise, the findings illuminate three global themes and six themes as treatment-seeking motives among the participants including; motives related to family (reason for family and reason of family), quality of life (adverse effects on personal lifestyle and health) and economic motives (financial failure and job failure).ConclusionsThe findings can improve our understanding of the motives for seeking treatment from the perspective of opioid patients who entered themselves into treatment. Particularly, these findings could help policymakers and treatment providers to better understand opioid-use patient’s perceived concerns and fears as motives for treatment-seeking.

Highlights

  • Opioid use remains a significant cause of harm to individual health

  • This quote is quite interesting because it shows that why loss of a job, but losing the job-related reputation made some participants re-think their opioid use disorder (OUD) status and aim for treatment seeking. This quote was chosen to show how dynamics of job and reputation emerged in the manuscripts as determinants of the treatment decision. This qualitative study explored how perceived concerns and fears related to drug use disorder acted as motives for treatment-seeking among opioid-use male patients voluntarily attending a variety of treatment centers in Isfahan, Iran

  • S we found that motives for treatment-seeking varied across individuals [14]

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Summary

Introduction

Opioid use remains a significant cause of harm to individual health. Perceived motives are of the main factors that help lead a patient into seeking treatment voluntarily to obviate that harm. The current study expands on the literature by exploring when and how male users of opioids become motivated to voluntarily seek treatment services. The opioid use crisis remains a significant cause of individual and public previous studies have shown that opioid users were at higher risk of panic, social phobia, agoraphobia, and low self-reported mental health as well as anxiety and mood disorders [11,12,13]. Perceived motives are of prominent mechanisms that can help lead patients to seek treatment voluntarily [16, 20, 21]

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