Perceptions of Barriers to Using Opioid Analgesics: A Mixed Methods Study.

Atsede Aregay, Margaret O'Connor, Jill Stow, Nicola Ayers, Susan Lee
Author Information
  1. Atsede Aregay: Department of Health and Nursing Sciences, University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway.
  2. Margaret O'Connor: School of Nursing and Midwifery, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
  3. Jill Stow: Department of Perioperative Medicine, St Vincent's Private Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
  4. Nicola Ayers: School of Nursing, BPP University, London, United Kingdom.
  5. Susan Lee: School of Nursing and Midwifery, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Abstract

Background: Availability and accessibility of opioids are a worldwide problem. In low-resource settings, such as Ethiopia, access to opioids is either limited or nonexistent and legally restricted in health care settings. This study aimed to identify barriers for the availability and accessibility of opioids in Ethiopian rural and regional health care settings.
Methods: A mixed-method case study design was used. A total of 220 nurses from primary, secondary, and tertiary health care settings were invited to participate in a survey of knowledge and practice. For the qualitative interview, 38 participants were recruited from educational facilities, health services, and the community across a region.
Results: Barriers in availability and accessibility of opioid analgesics were expressing pain considered as a sign of weakness, lack of knowledge, side effect concerns about prescribing morphine, only doctors being authorized to prescribe morphine, lack of foreign currency to import morphine ingredients, and inequity in accessing morphine in hospitals and none in rural health care settings.
Conclusion: The findings of this study indicate that opioids, particularly morphine, were not consistently available and accessible to all patients in need. Health professionals lacked knowledge about opioids. Strengthening the existing pain-free initiatives and improving the type, dose, and supply of morphine could help reduce needless suffering and enhance access to essential pain medicines for those in need.

Keywords

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Word Cloud

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