How policy problems and solutions travel in the scientific literature: An international scientometric analysis of the French Model of opioid use disorder care

Author:

Kankanam Gamage Kasunka1,Chiu Kellia1,Ryk Justin1,Grundy Quinn2,Sud Abhimanyu134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bridgepoint Collaboratory Lunenfeld‐Tanenbaum Research Institute, Sinai Health System Toronto Ontario Canada

2. Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

3. Department of Family and Community Medicine, Temerty Faculty of Medicine University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

4. Humber River Hospital Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractRationaleThe 2007 article ‘Why buprenorphine is so successful in treating opiate addiction in France’ has been widely cited to promote various solutions to growing opioid‐related harms across multiple jurisdictions globally. However, selective promotion of aspects of the French experience or promotion of the French experience without considering relevant contextual factors may inform policies that will not bring the same outcomes as in France, including the introduction of possible unintended negative consequences. The scientific literature is one important arena in which policy solutions are identified, evaluated, promoted and disseminated. Scientific communication of the French opioid use disorder care model offers a timely and relevant example through which to examine how problem representations travel and to consider the effects of these representations.Aims and ObjectivesWe aimed to explore where, when, and how the content of this 2007 index article has travelled through the scientific literature.MethodInformed by Bacchi's understanding of problem representation, we conducted a scientometric analysis of the index article. This included categorical analyses using a combination of citation metadata and content data to identify patterns across locations and time.ResultsResearchers in the United States and Anglophone countries affirmatively cited specific index study content, namely less stringent regulations and positive outcomes, such as reductions in overdose deaths and increases in buprenorphine utilization. These citations were more common after 2015 and were more likely to be in discussion sections of nonempirical publications. Researchers from France cited similar content but did so nonaffirmatively, and throughout the study period. Likewise, the French citations were mostly agenda‐setting citations in the introductory sections of empirical studies. US studies received the highest attention based on number of citations and Altmetric scores.ConclusionUS studies, by focusing on less stringent buprenorphine regulation as the primary solution of concern, have constructed opioid‐related harms as a problem of restrictive regulations for buprenorphine. This selective focus on regulation, as opposed to other aspects of the French Model elucidated in the index article such as changes pertaining to the values and financing that structure health service delivery, represents an important missed opportunity for evidence‐informed policy learning across jurisdictions.

Funder

Health Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference87 articles.

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