JMWH: Managing Bias in the Care of Pregnant and Parenting People with Substance Use Disorder

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Abstract

Background

Unintentional overdose is the leading cause of pregnancy-associated death in Maryland and is preventable. Stigma contributes to birthing peoples’ disengagement with the health care system, and health care professionals may participate in stigmatizing processes. We aimed to develop and evaluate a training on stigma and bias related to substance use disorder (SUD) for maternal health care professionals in Maryland.

Methods

We used a community-engaged process to develop a training on stigma and bias related to SUD in pregnancy and implemented it with Maryland maternal health care professionals employed in birth hospital settings. We conducted a multimethod pre-post training evaluation, using a quantitative analysis of implementation reach, a pre-post knowledge test, a satisfaction survey, and a qualitative analysis of hospital facilitation meeting logs.

Results

The training was completed by 1145 health care professionals. Knowledge test scores increased significantly after training, with the greatest change noted in the safety of medications for opioid use disorder during pregnancy. Over 90% of participants found the training relevant and planned to actively use what they learned. Qualitative feedback indicated the training may increase empathy with the patient population and contribute to practice changes.

Discussion

Our evaluation suggests that this training is valuable, effective at increasing knowledge, and a potential catalyst for practice change among health care professionals working with pregnant and postpartum patients with SUD.