AI Article Synopsis

  • Opioid replacement therapy (ORT) is the primary treatment for opioid dependence in Australia, but recovery is complicated by factors like access, cost, and stigma, particularly in rural areas.
  • Six participants from rural ORT programs shared their experiences through interviews, revealing themes of personal reinvention, restrictions related to their environment, challenges in employment, and the importance of reconnection with family and community.
  • The study highlights the need for supportive services that promote identity rebuilding and address trauma to improve social connections for individuals in rural ORT programs.

Article Abstract

Background: Opioid replacement therapy (ORT) offers a harm minimization approach and is the mainstay treatment option for opioid dependence in Australia. Recovery is known to be complicated because of service access, cost, workforce availability, privacy, stigma, and discrimination. Rural living is considered to magnify each complication of recovery, yet little is understood about how opioid dependence recovery is experienced in rural Australia. This study aimed to explore the lived experience of people receiving ORT in rural Australia and describe impediments to recovery.

Methods: In this qualitative study design, all outpatients enrolled in ORT at two rural Australian sites were invited to participate. Six volunteers from each site participated in a semistructured interview (eight men, four women; mean age = 44.8 years).

Results: The participants had completed 3 years of secondary school education on average. Four major themes emerged: reinvention, restriction, employment, and reconnection. Small communities increased the likelihood of ORT participants knowing people both directly and indirectly, affecting their ability to reconstruct an identity. Lived distance from prescribers and dosing points dictated daily activity, including opportunities to seek and maintain employment. Rural ORT treatment seekers indicated that geographical displacement and separation from family, the people they needed to reconnect with, were challenging.

Conclusion: Rural people engaged in ORT require positive reinforcement from service providers, enabling identity reinvention and disconnection from the drug-seeking world. Acknowledging underlying trauma and supporting reconnection with loved ones may foster positive social connectedness.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/JAN.0000000000000378DOI Listing

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