Cargando…

Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults

We described public views toward harm reduction among Canadian adults and tested a social exposure model predicting support for these contentious services, drawing on theories in the morality policy, intergroup relations, addiction, and media communication literatures. A quota sample of 4645 adults...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wild, T. Cameron, Koziel, Jakob, Anderson-Baron, Jalene, Asbridge, Mark, Belle-Isle, Lynne, Dell, Colleen, Elliott, Richard, Hathaway, Andrew, MacPherson, Donald, McBride, Keely, Pauly, Bernie, Strike, Carol, Galovan, Adam, Hyshka, Elaine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8133460/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34010338
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251860
_version_ 1783695075490922496
author Wild, T. Cameron
Koziel, Jakob
Anderson-Baron, Jalene
Asbridge, Mark
Belle-Isle, Lynne
Dell, Colleen
Elliott, Richard
Hathaway, Andrew
MacPherson, Donald
McBride, Keely
Pauly, Bernie
Strike, Carol
Galovan, Adam
Hyshka, Elaine
author_facet Wild, T. Cameron
Koziel, Jakob
Anderson-Baron, Jalene
Asbridge, Mark
Belle-Isle, Lynne
Dell, Colleen
Elliott, Richard
Hathaway, Andrew
MacPherson, Donald
McBride, Keely
Pauly, Bernie
Strike, Carol
Galovan, Adam
Hyshka, Elaine
author_sort Wild, T. Cameron
collection PubMed
description We described public views toward harm reduction among Canadian adults and tested a social exposure model predicting support for these contentious services, drawing on theories in the morality policy, intergroup relations, addiction, and media communication literatures. A quota sample of 4645 adults (18+ years), randomly drawn from an online research panel and stratified to match age and sex distributions of adults within and across Canadian provinces, was recruited in June 2018. Participants completed survey items assessing support for harm reduction for people who use drugs (PWUD) and for seven harm reduction interventions. Additional items assessed exposure to media coverage on harm reduction, and scales assessing stigma toward PWUD (α = .72), personal familiarity with PWUD (α = .84), and disease model beliefs about addiction (α = .79). Most (64%) Canadians supported harm reduction (provincial estimates = 60% - 73%). Five of seven interventions received majority support, including: outreach (79%), naloxone (72%), drug checking (70%), needle distribution (60%) and supervised drug consumption (55%). Low-threshold opioid agonist treatment and safe inhalation interventions received less support (49% and 44%). Our social exposure model, adjusted for respondent sex, household income, political views, and education, exhibited good fit and accounted for 17% of variance in public support for harm reduction. Personal familiarity with PWUD and disease model beliefs about addiction were directly associated with support (βs = .07 and -0.10, respectively), and indirectly influenced public support via stigmatized attitudes toward PWUD (βs = 0.01 and -0.01, respectively). Strategies to increase support for harm reduction could problematize certain disease model beliefs (e.g., “There are only two possibilities for an alcoholic or drug addict–permanent abstinence or death”) and creating opportunities to reduce social distance between PWUD, the public, and policy makers.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8133460
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-81334602021-05-27 Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults Wild, T. Cameron Koziel, Jakob Anderson-Baron, Jalene Asbridge, Mark Belle-Isle, Lynne Dell, Colleen Elliott, Richard Hathaway, Andrew MacPherson, Donald McBride, Keely Pauly, Bernie Strike, Carol Galovan, Adam Hyshka, Elaine PLoS One Research Article We described public views toward harm reduction among Canadian adults and tested a social exposure model predicting support for these contentious services, drawing on theories in the morality policy, intergroup relations, addiction, and media communication literatures. A quota sample of 4645 adults (18+ years), randomly drawn from an online research panel and stratified to match age and sex distributions of adults within and across Canadian provinces, was recruited in June 2018. Participants completed survey items assessing support for harm reduction for people who use drugs (PWUD) and for seven harm reduction interventions. Additional items assessed exposure to media coverage on harm reduction, and scales assessing stigma toward PWUD (α = .72), personal familiarity with PWUD (α = .84), and disease model beliefs about addiction (α = .79). Most (64%) Canadians supported harm reduction (provincial estimates = 60% - 73%). Five of seven interventions received majority support, including: outreach (79%), naloxone (72%), drug checking (70%), needle distribution (60%) and supervised drug consumption (55%). Low-threshold opioid agonist treatment and safe inhalation interventions received less support (49% and 44%). Our social exposure model, adjusted for respondent sex, household income, political views, and education, exhibited good fit and accounted for 17% of variance in public support for harm reduction. Personal familiarity with PWUD and disease model beliefs about addiction were directly associated with support (βs = .07 and -0.10, respectively), and indirectly influenced public support via stigmatized attitudes toward PWUD (βs = 0.01 and -0.01, respectively). Strategies to increase support for harm reduction could problematize certain disease model beliefs (e.g., “There are only two possibilities for an alcoholic or drug addict–permanent abstinence or death”) and creating opportunities to reduce social distance between PWUD, the public, and policy makers. Public Library of Science 2021-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC8133460/ /pubmed/34010338 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251860 Text en © 2021 Wild et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wild, T. Cameron
Koziel, Jakob
Anderson-Baron, Jalene
Asbridge, Mark
Belle-Isle, Lynne
Dell, Colleen
Elliott, Richard
Hathaway, Andrew
MacPherson, Donald
McBride, Keely
Pauly, Bernie
Strike, Carol
Galovan, Adam
Hyshka, Elaine
Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults
title Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults
title_full Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults
title_fullStr Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults
title_full_unstemmed Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults
title_short Public support for harm reduction: A population survey of Canadian adults
title_sort public support for harm reduction: a population survey of canadian adults
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8133460/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34010338
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0251860
work_keys_str_mv AT wildtcameron publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT kozieljakob publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT andersonbaronjalene publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT asbridgemark publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT belleislelynne publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT dellcolleen publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT elliottrichard publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT hathawayandrew publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT macphersondonald publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT mcbridekeely publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT paulybernie publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT strikecarol publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT galovanadam publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults
AT hyshkaelaine publicsupportforharmreductionapopulationsurveyofcanadianadults