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Preventive medicine · May 2022
Support for evidence-informed opioid policies and interventions: The role of racial attitudes, political affiliation, and opioid stigma.
- Maria Pyra, Bruce Taylor, Elizabeth Flanagan, Anna Hotton, O'Dell Johnson, Phoebe Lamuda, John Schneider, and Harold A Pollack.
- Department of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States of America.
- Prev Med. 2022 May 1; 158: 107034.
AbstractPolitical affiliation, racial attitudes, and opioid stigma influence public support for public health responses to address opioid use disorders (OUD). Prior studies suggest public perceptions of the opioid epidemic are less racialized and less politically polarized than were public perceptions of the crack cocaine epidemic. Analyzing a cross-sectional, nationally representative sample (n = 1161 U.S. adults) from the October 2020 AmeriSpeak survey, we explored how political affiliation, racial attitudes (as captured in the Color-Blind Racial Attitudes Scale [CoBRAS]), and OUD stigma were associated with respondents' expressed views regarding four critical domains. Respondents with unfavorable attitudes towards Black Americans were less likely to support expanding Medicaid funding, increasing government spending to provide services for people living with OUD, and distributing naloxone for overdose prevention. Democratic Party affiliation was associated with greater support for all three of the above measures, and increased support for mandatory treatment, which may be seen as a substitute for more punitive interventions. Black respondents were also less likely to support expanding Medicaid funding, increasing government spending to provide services for people living with OUD, and of distributing naloxone. Our finding suggest that negative attitudes towards African-Americans and political differences remain important factors of public opinion on responding to the OUD epidemic, even after controlling for opioid stigma. Our findings also suggest that culturally-competent dialogue within politically conservative and Black communities may be important to engage public support for evidence-informed treatment and prevention.Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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