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Original Articles

First Responders’ Views of Naloxone: Does Stigma Matter?

ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 1534-1544 | Published online: 06 Jul 2022
 

Abstract

Background

Prior work has suggested that first responders have mixed feelings about harm reduction strategies used to fight the opioid epidemic, such as the use of naloxone to reverse opioid overdose. Researchers have also noted that provider-based stigma of people who use opioids (PWUO) may influence perceptions of appropriate interventions for opioid use disorder (OUD). This study examined first responders’ perceptions of naloxone and the relationship between stigma of OUD and perceptions of naloxone.

Methods

A web-based survey assessing perceptions of PWUO and naloxone was administered to 282 police officers and students enrolled in EMT and paramedic training courses located in the Northeastern United States. Bivariate and multivariable analyses assessed the relationship between variants of stigma (e.g., perceived dangerousness, blame, social distance, and fatalism) and self-reported perceptions of naloxone.

Results

Participants, in the aggregate, held slightly negative attitudes toward the use of naloxone. Findings from multivariable modeling suggest that stigma of OUD, living in a rural area, and prior experience administering naloxone, were significantly and inversely related to support for the use of naloxone. Support for the disease model of addiction and associating drug use with low socioeconomic status were positively related to support for the use of naloxone.

Conclusion

Efforts to alleviate perceptions of PWUO as dangerous, blameworthy, or incapable of recovery may increase first responders’ support for naloxone. To this end, first responder training programs should include instruction on the disease model of addiction, and more broadly, attempt to foster familiarity between PWUO and the professionals who serve them.

Notes

1 Here we use the word “predictors” in a linear manner, not in a causal manner.

2 Due to page limitations, these analyses are not reported below, but are available upon request.

3 Again, the term “predictor” here is used to refer to a linear relationship, not a causal one.

Additional information

Funding

This project received no funding for any element of the project, including study design, data collection, data analysis, or manuscript preparation.

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