2024
Who feels safe calling 911: are prior experiences of anti-Black racial discrimination associated with hesitancy seeking emergency medical services in the event of accidental drug overdose? – a study protocol
Hall O, Trimble C, Garcia S, Grayson S, Joseph L, Entrup P, Jegede O, Martel J, Tetrault J, Mathis M, Jordan A. Who feels safe calling 911: are prior experiences of anti-Black racial discrimination associated with hesitancy seeking emergency medical services in the event of accidental drug overdose? – a study protocol. Annals Of Medicine 2024, 57: 2439540. PMID: 39697058, PMCID: PMC11660366, DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2024.2439540.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEmergency medical servicesExperiences of racial discriminationCross-sectional surveyMedical servicesAccidental drug overdoseGroup-Based Medical Mistrust ScaleAssociated with health disparitiesDrug overdoseGroup-based medical mistrustMedical Mistrust ScaleEveryday Discrimination ScaleBlack AmericansNon-parametric partial correlationsMedical discriminationRacial discriminationFatal drug overdosesHealth disparitiesQuestionnaire measuring perceptionsRelated health problemsMedical mistrustExploratory factor analysisBlack adultsSociodemographic informationCronbach's alphaGroup-based
2022
Substance use policy and practice in the COVID-19 pandemic: Learning from early pandemic responses through internationally comparative field data
Aronowitz S, Carroll J, Hansen H, Jauffret-Roustide M, Parker C, Suhail-Sindhu S, Albizu-Garcia C, Alegria M, Arrendondo J, Baldacchino A, Bluthenthal R, Bourgois P, Burraway J, Chen J, Ekhtiari H, Elkholy H, Farhoudian A, Friedman J, Jordan A, Kato L, Knight K, Martinez C, McNeil R, Murray H, Namirembe S, Radfar R, Roe L, Sarang A, Scherz C, Teck J, Textor L, Oanh K. Substance use policy and practice in the COVID-19 pandemic: Learning from early pandemic responses through internationally comparative field data. Global Public Health 2022, 17: 3654-3669. PMID: 36692903, DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2022.2129720.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCOVID-19Drug UsersHarm ReductionHumansPandemicsPublic PolicySubstance-Related DisordersConceptsEarly pandemic responseSocial protectionCOVID-19 pandemicSocial safety netSocial welfare systemPandemic responseNon-governmental organizationsCriminal legal systemSocial service infrastructureSemi-structured interviewsHealth service delivery modelsWelfare systemCommunity health practitionersEthnographic methodsSocial scientistsService delivery modelsStructural driversNational responseSafety netDrug policyQualitative dataPublic health infrastructureHarm reductionSystemic investmentInternational network
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