University of Kentucky
Black adults share about their experiences in drug treatment in a new University of Kentucky study published in the Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment.
Until now, few studies have included the voices of Black people and their experiences with treatment providers. Study authors hope it will inform changes to promote successful recovery and healing.
The study was conducted among 39 African Americans in Kentucky, where opioid-related deaths recently more than doubled among Blacks. All the interviewees had used opioids within the past six months.
Researchers found three primary themes influenced interviewees’ perceptions about treatment for substance-use disorder, centering on:
- Readiness for change, influenced by whether the treatment was mandated by an external entity such as the legal/justice system, or individuals were able to decide for themselves they were ready for help;
- Characteristics of their treatment provider (race, gender, the provider’s personal substance-use history, as well as their ability to build rapport, maintain confidentiality, and seem motivated to help);
- Relational support from people in the interviewees’ lives, such as partners and family members.
Danielle Stevens-Watkins (UK photo by Mark Cornelison) |
The paper is the first to be published from a $3.2 million National Institute on Drug Abuse project led by Stevens-Watkins, now in its second year. The project will include interviews with 800 African Americans who misuse prescription and illicit opioids, filling a need for data on this under-served group.
Readiness for change
Research conducted among primarily white participants has found that time in substance-use treatment tended to increase readiness to change, regardless of whether it was mandated by the legal system. But that was not true among African Americans in the study.
“The men and women in our study reported less success in their experiences with treatment when it was mandated, versus something they sought out because they wanted it for themselves,” said Candice Hargons, associate professor of counseling psychology and interim chair of the Department of Educational, School and Counseling Psychology.
Possible reasons that participants felt this way about mandated treatment were tied to the culture and climate of mandated-treatment settings.
The study authors suggest that assessing Blacks for readiness and motivation is important, especially when treatment is mandated. They said helping them reduce feelings of loss of control in treatment could increase desire to engage in the process. This could be accomplished, for instance, through developing a collaborative experience, where clients have a role in defining their needs.
While the interviewees understood that personal investment in the treatment process was necessary for recovery, some may have overestimated that wanting it for yourself was the predominant driver in the recovery journey, the study authors wrote.
“Many of the people who talked to us for this study felt someone can simply ‘will’ themselves into recovery,” said postdoctoral fellow Brittany Miller-Roenigk. “Having a personal investment in the process is important, but you also must consider the biological aspects of recovery and the ways treatment helps to address those. It really takes both a readiness for change and a supportive therapeutic environment along the way.”
Provider characteristics
The study’s look into the lived experiences of Black men and women who use opioids also highlighted how provider characteristics can largely influence the treatment process. Many expressed a difficulty in trusting others, complicated by a lack of racial similarity with providers.
“There is a great need to recruit more Black therapists,” said Natalie Malone, Ph.D. student in counseling psychology. “Many of the participants in this study had never or rarely encountered a provider of color. Several talked about needing to feel the therapist will understand them when talking about experiences of racism, discrimination and microaggressions.”
A few said that race did not matter, if the provider had the ability to build rapport, avoid a judgmental tone and maintain confidentiality.
While most participants felt they could best express themselves to a race-matched provider, opinions were mixed on participants’ preference for providers who had experienced addiction. Some felt providers who were in recovery could better understand them. A few said they preferred providers who had never experienced addiction because they did not trust their providers’ sobriety, meaning it would be difficult to confide in someone that may have questionable time clean from substances.
Study participants also discussed differences in quality between mandated programs, compared to treatment programs available through insurance or direct payment. Some thought treatment facilities more likely to have Black patients had therapists with less education and training than those serving predominantly white patients. Participants also suggested that providers in mandated programs may have been facing burnout and lacked investment in the treatment process, too.
Relational support
Partners and family members were primary sources of support networks among the individuals in the study. Partners undergoing treatment simultaneously were most likely to provide support. Nobody in the study said their partners were a barrier to treatment.
For those with family members aware of their drug use, several identified their family as a primary source of support. Some family members were unsupportive of treatment due to their own personal substance use.
The researchers found a third theme they refer to as “absent support,” which had a negative impact but not a negative intent. This happened among participants’ families that spend time together socially but have a culture of not becoming involved in the personal affairs of others. Absent support was most often related to maintaining privacy, which is consistent in the literature among African Americans, the authors said.
When possible, the study authors suggest integrating peers, family members or partners into treatment may be a useful resource for reducing opioid use among African Americans.
The study authors are sharing these initial findings to highlight aspects of treatment that could be addressed to most likely influence success.
“It is important to take a deeper look into the lived experience of Black men and women who use opioids so that researchers, clinicians and those who influence programs that support recovery and healing have a better understanding of the factors that can make a true difference in their success,” said Destin Mizelle, a Ph.D. student in counseling psychology.
This is a critical time for Black individuals who use opioids, said Jovonna Atkinson, a master's-degree student in the College of Social Work.
Stevens-Watkins noted, “Overdose-related deaths are on the rise and Black men and women are more likely to face similar and sometimes harsher consequences than their white counterparts, including higher likelihood for criminal convictions, longer incarcerations, higher unemployment rates and increased mental health risks. The more data we can gather to inform culturally-tailored interventions, the greater chance we have to reduce the adverse social, legal and fatal consequences associated with opioid use among Black populations.”
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