Using contact-based education to destigmatize opioid use disorder among medical students.
Autor: | Mort, Sophia C., Díaz, Sebastián R., Beverly, Elizabeth A. |
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Předmět: |
NARCOTICS
PSYCHOLOGY of medical students LECTURE method in teaching STATISTICAL power analysis STATISTICAL significance SUBSTANCE abuse CONFIDENCE ANALYSIS of variance SAMPLE size (Statistics) ANALGESICS EFFECT sizes (Statistics) SOCIAL stigma CURRICULUM VIDEOCONFERENCING FISHER exact test PRE-tests & post-tests T-test (Statistics) MEDICAL schools REPEATED measures design DESCRIPTIVE statistics STATISTICAL sampling INTENTION LOGISTIC regression analysis DATA analysis software MEDICAL education |
Zdroj: | Teaching & Learning in Medicine; Apr-May2021, Vol. 33 Issue 2, p196-209, 14p |
Abstrakt: | Problem: Opioid-related overdose deaths are a significant public health concern globally, and current recommendations to address chronic pain and opioid-related stigma in medical curricula may be accomplished using contact-based education. To assess the effectiveness of this technique in changing medical students' opioid use disorder (OUD) stigma and opioid-related postgraduate intentions, the authors implemented two curricular interventions – (1) a modified contact-based education panel and (2) a didactic lecture – at a medical school. Intervention: Medical students were randomized to a curricular intervention and completed pre- and post-assessments to measure opioid misuse knowledge, opioid-related postgraduate intentions, and OUD stigma. One group of participants attended a lecture on opioids and medication assisted treatment (MAT) developed by a clinical psychiatrist; a second group interacted with a 5-member panel of opioid content experts and an individual in recovery. We conducted Fisher's exact tests, paired t-tests, repeated-measures mixed ANOVAs, and logistic regression to examine changes in pre- and post-assessment responses. All first- and second-year (i.e., pre-clinical) medical students at a large, Midwestern medical school with three campuses were invited to participate in a two-arm, parallel educational study comparing the efficacy of two types of curricular interventions. Students at the main campus attended the modified contact-based education panel or the didactic lecture in person, while students at the two distance campuses attended the modified contact-based education or lecture remotely using the University's videoconferencing system. Impact: A total of 109 students participated in the study (average age 24.2 years (SD = 2.6), 64.2% female, 79.8% white, 56.0% second-year students, 67.9% attended on main campus, lecture = 52 participants, modified contact-based = 57 participants). Baseline responses were similar across groups. Following the session, participants in both interventions rated drug abuse (percent increase = 21.2%, p <.001) and prescription drug diversion (percent increase = 7.6%, p =.004) as more serious problems. Participants from both interventions expressed increased confidence in caring for patients with OUD (percent increase = 45.5%, p <.001) and increased interest in pursuing MAT training (percent increase = 21.5%, p =.04). Both curricular interventions were equally effective at reducing OUD stigma with a significant 8.2% decrease in total stigma scores and a large effect size (p <.001, η |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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