Publications by authors named "Devin Banks"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to find environmental features linked to higher rates of drug-related fatalities and created a risk score based on these features.
  • Researchers analyzed overdose data from St. Louis County, using Risk Terrain Modeling (RTM) to determine how proximity to various places affected overdose risk, separating data by drug type and race of decedents.
  • Key findings revealed that fatalities were notably higher near hotels/motels, foreclosures, and restaurants, with specific patterns differing by race, suggesting that certain built environments reflect social conditions that contribute to overdose risk.
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  • Substance use stigma is a significant barrier to treatment and recovery for individuals with substance use disorders, and this stigma is intensified when combined with Black racial identity.
  • A scoping review of studies revealed that Black individuals generally face less stigma than White individuals regarding substance use, but they experience more treatment-related stigma overall.
  • The complexity of how race and substance use stigma interact was evidenced by both quantitative and qualitative studies, highlighting varying perceptions based on racial identity and the necessity for standardized measures in future research.
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Objectives: Widespread naloxone distribution is key to mitigating opioid-related morbidity, but stigma remains a barrier. Naloxone stigma among providers, emergency responders, and the public is well-documented and associated with treatment and policy preferences, but little is known about naloxone stigma among people who use drugs (PWUD), who may be overdose first responders. This study examines naloxone stigma, its correlates, and its association with stigma toward medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) among PWUD.

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Background: Black individuals in the U.S. face increasing racial disparities in drug overdose related to social determinants of health, including place-based features.

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Article Synopsis
  • Racism consists of three main parts: individual, cultural, and institutional, with most research focusing mainly on the individual aspect and not enough on the cultural and institutional dimensions.
  • This study explored how cultural and institutional race-related stress directly impacts anxiety and depression in ethnic/racially minoritized young adults, while also examining the protective role of ethnic identity affirmation, belongingness, and commitment (EI-ABC).
  • Findings revealed that both cultural and institutional race-related stress predicted higher anxiety and depression symptoms, but only cultural stress was buffered by EI-ABC, highlighting the need for interventions that bolster EI-ABC to help reduce anxiety related to cultural stress.
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Missouri's Overdose Field Report (ODFR) is a community-based reporting system which intends to capture overdoses which may not be otherwise recorded. Describe the factors related to non-fatal overdoses reported to Missouri's ODFR. This study used a descriptive epidemiological approach to examine the demographics and circumstances of overdoses reported to the ODFR.

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Article Synopsis
  • Alcohol is a significant factor in many deaths, with a striking increase in alcohol-involved fatalities in the St. Louis region, particularly between 2011 and 2022, where these deaths rose by over 54%.
  • A study of 7,641 substance-involved deaths revealed that 26.29% included alcohol, with overdose deaths being the most prevalent, particularly those involving opioids and benzodiazepines.
  • The data indicated that the likelihood of alcohol involvement in deaths increases with age and is notably higher in males, underscoring the need for targeted research and prevention strategies for alcohol-related fatalities in diverse demographic groups.
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Black and Latinx people are disproportionately impacted by HIV, COVID-19, and other syndemic health crises with similar underlying social determinants of health. Lessons learned from the HIV pandemic and COVID-19 response have been invoked to improve health equity at the systemic level in the face of other emergent health crises. However, few have examined the potential translation of strategies between syndemics at the individual level.

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Background: Youth who experience traumatic events are at a substantially higher risk of engaging in substance use and sexual risk behaviors and problems (eg, HIV acquisition) than their non-trauma-exposed counterparts. Evidence-based substance use and risky sexual behavior prevention may reduce the risk of these outcomes. Trauma-focused mental health treatment provides a window of opportunity for the implementation of such preventive work with these youth.

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Background: Structural oppression affects health behaviors through residence in suboptimal neighborhoods and exposure to community violence. Youth and parents report perceptions of neighborhood factors that can affect youth substance use behaviors. Given that Latinx youth report higher levels of perceived community violence than other racial and ethnic groups, it is imperative to examine how youth- and parent-perceived neighborhood-level factors may relate to youth substance use.

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: Normative perceptions are strongly related to risk behaviors among emerging adults but the role of gender-specific normative perceptions remain unclear. : The current study examined the differential effects of same-gender and gender-neutral normative perceptions on self-reported substance use and sexual risk behavior. College students (n = 389, ages 18-25) reported binge drinking, cannabis use and prescription drug misuse, sexual risk behavior, and the perceived frequency of these behaviors by both the average- and same-gender adult.

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Background: Since 2017, Missouri has increased access to medication for opioid use disorder (OUD) within the State's publicly-funded substance use specialty treatment system through a "Medication First" approach. Results from a statewide assessment of the first year of State Targeted Response implementation showed increases and improvements in overall treatment admissions, medication utilization, and treatment retention. The current study, which focuses on the St.

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Opioid use among pregnant and postpartum women and people (PPWP) has significant health repercussions. This study explores how substance-use behaviors may vary by stage in recovery among PPWP with opioid use disorder (OUD). We recruited 29 PPWP with OUD.

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Objectives: Pregnant and postpartum women and people (PPWP) who use opioids experience higher rates of morbidity, preterm labor, and stillbirth than those who do not. Although medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) is the standard of treatment, utilization among PPWP has remained low because of MOUD stigma and misconceptions. The current report examined general and pregnancy-related MOUD attitudes, norms, and self-efficacy among PPWP seeking treatment.

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Article Synopsis
  • The third wave of the opioid crisis, marked by the rise of fentanyl, has led to increased overdose deaths and significant racial disparities affecting Black Americans.
  • The study conducted in St. Louis examined the geographic patterns of opioid overdose deaths before and during the fentanyl era, revealing that overdose deaths became more concentrated in predominantly Black neighborhoods.
  • The findings highlight the urgent need for policy interventions in high-deprivation communities to address the growing impact of the opioid crisis on Black populations.
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Experiences of racial discrimination are pervasive among Black youth, resulting in psychosocial problems such as depression and anxiety. Rumination plays a key role in linking racial discrimination and internalizing concerns. Developmental age has also been shown to influence the extent to which racial discrimination and rumination impact mental health; however, studies have yet to explore the interplay between these factors.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how the COVID-19 pandemic affected work satisfaction, stress, and perceived work quality among addiction treatment providers.
  • It involved 91 professionals and found that over half of them reported a decrease in work quality, linked to higher emotional exhaustion and workplace stress.
  • The research highlights the need for treatment facility administrations to address these issues to improve staff well-being and client care.
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Background: Black individuals in the USA face disproportionate increases in rates of fatal opioid overdose despite federal efforts to mitigate the opioid crisis. The aim of this study was to examine what drives increases in opioid overdose death among Black Americans based on the experience of key stakeholders.

Methods: Focus groups were conducted with stakeholders providing substance use prevention services in Black communities in St.

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Background: Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) is well-suited to measure adolescent substance use. Previous research with adolescents, particularly racially minoritized adolescents, has predominantly provided mobile devices to participants as a strategy to reduce structural barriers to technology access. This report examined feasibility and acceptability of a text-message-delivered EMA protocol to adolescents' personal phones.

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Social inequities made some sociodemographic groups - including those of older age, minoritized race/ethnicity, and low socioeconomic status - disproportionately vulnerable to morbidity and mortality associated with the opioid epidemic and COVID-19 pandemic. Given shared vulnerability to these public health crises, it is critical to understand how COVID-19 impacts substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and recovery among people with these characteristics. The current study examined COVID-19's perceived impact on treatment factors and psychosocial outcomes by sociodemographic vulnerability.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how racial discrimination impacts substance use among Black adolescents by looking at both collective self-esteem (esteem related to group identity) and personal self-esteem.
  • A sample of 1,514 students from grades 5 to 12 was analyzed, revealing that experiences of discrimination lead to increased substance use due to lower self-esteem levels.
  • The results suggest that improving both personal and collective self-esteem could help reduce the negative effects of discrimination on substance use in Black youth.
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Adolescents exposed to trauma experience disproportionate rates of HIV/STI. However, integrated treatment for trauma and sexual risk behavior is rare. To inform integrated prevention efforts, the current study describes prevalence and correlates of sexual risk behavior among adolescents seeking treatment for symptoms of posttraumatic stress and substance use disorders.

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Background: Racial discrimination constitutes a significant risk factor for depressive symptoms among Black youth. Rumination, a maladaptive self-regulatory stress response, is a notable pathway by which racial discrimination contributes to depressive symptoms among racial/ethnic minority adults. Yet, examinations of the mechanistic nature of rumination in the context of racial discrimination among racial/ethnic minority youth remain limited.

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