A realist review of best practices and contextual factors enhancing treatment of opioid dependence in Indigenous contexts

Lit review
by
Henderson, Rita et al

Release Date

2023

Geography

International

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

Yes

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

Yes

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

The objective of this study was to examine international literature to identify best practices for treatment of opioid dependence in Indigenous contexts.

Findings/Key points

Twenty-four articles provided evidence of the importance of compassion in treatment. Compassion was evidenced primarily at the individual level, in interpersonal relationships based on nonjudgmental care and respect for the client, as well as in more holistic treatment programs beyond biophysical supports such as medically assisted treatment. Compassion was also shown to be important at the structural level in harm reduction policies. Twenty-five articles provided evidence of the importance of client self-determination in treatment programs. Client self-determination was evidenced primarily at the structural level, in community-based programs and collaborative partnerships based in trust and meaningful engagement but was also shown to be important at the individual level in client-directed care. Identified outcomes moved beyond a reduction in opioid use to include holistic health and wellness goals, such as improved life skills, self-esteem, feelings of safety, and healing at the individual level. Community-level outcomes were also identified, including more families kept intact, reduction in drug-related medical evacuations, criminal charges and child protection cases, and an increase in school attendance, cleanliness, and community spirit.

Direct link, if DOI is not active yet: https://harmreductionjournal.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12954-…

Design/methods

Lit review - 27 articles included

Keywords

Barriers and enablers
Indigenous
Social benefits