Abstract
Abstract
Aims
To assess the extent of Coronavirus-related disruption to health and social care treatment and social interactions among people with lived or living experience of substance use in Scotland, and explore potential reasons for variations in disruption.
Design
Cross sectional mixed methods interview, incorporating a social network ‘egonet interview’ approach asking about whether participants had interactions with a range of substance use, health, social care or third sector organisations, or informal social interactions.
Setting
Five Alcohol and Drug Partnership Areas in Scotland.
Participants
57 (42% women) participants were involved in the study, on average 42 years old.
Measurements
Five-point Likert scale reporting whether interactions with a range of services and people had gotten much better, better, no different (or no change), worse, or much worse since COVID19 and lockdown. Ratings were nested within participants (Individuals provided multiple ratings) and some ratings were also nested within treatment service (services received multiple ratings). The nested structure was accounted for using cross classified ordinal logistic multilevel models.
Findings
While the overall average suggested only a slight negative change in interactions (mean rating 2.93), there were substantial variations according to type of interaction, and between individuals. Reported change was more often negative for mental health services (Adjusted OR = 0.93 95% CI 0.17,0.90), and positive for pharmacies (3.03 95% CI 1.36, 5.93). The models found between-participant variation of around 10%, and negligible between-service variation of around 1% in ratings. Ratings didn’t vary by individual age or gender but there was variation between areas.
Conclusions
Substance use treatment service adaptations due to COVID19 lockdown led to both positive and negative service user experiences. Social network methods provide an effective way to describe complex system-wide interaction patterns, and to measure variations at the individual, service, and area level.
Funder
Medical Research Council
Chief Scientist Office, Scottish Government Health and Social Care Directorate
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC