Abstract

BackgroundHarm reduction interventions, including SSP (Syringe Services Programs) and MAT (Medications for Addiction Treatment) have demonstrated the potential to help stem the epidemic of opioid use disorder. However, for that potential to be realized, people must expect that healthcare providers will be supportive if they ever seek care for substance use. MethodsThis cross-sectional study investigated perceptions of provider support for SSP and MAT in the general population of 14 states selected specifically for 50 percent of the sample to include participants from rural counties with high rates of non-medical opioid use and injection. A survey of 3096 adults in 14 states and 675 counties within the Appalachian and Midwestern regions of the United States (collected between November of 2019 and May of 2020) examined the association between perceptions of provider support for harm reduction interventions, community members’ trust of community healthcare providers, and expectations for patient-provider interactions involving disclosure of non-medical drug use. Results and conclusionPath analysis supported the hypothesis that perceptions of provider support for harm reduction interventions predict positive expectations about patient-provider interactions and that trust in providers mediates this association. The model fit well among participants who reported past non-medical use of drugs and those who did not. In contrast to other research suggesting that trust in providers may be inconsequential during the initial stages of care, the current research suggests that trust may shape expectations about patient-provider interactions even before people use drugs. Communication of support for harm reduction interventions by providers may play an important role in promoting health care-seeking in populations that use drugs currently or who may use drugs in the future in high-risk rural areas of the United States.

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