Olivia Woodrow

Stigma of health and psychosocial professionals towards people who use drugs

Shared by Olivia Woodrow - 26 September 2023
Originally posted by Olivia Woodrow - 26 September 2023
Event Date
City/Region/State
Medellín
Event Type
ISSUP Webinar
Country
Colombia
Event Language

Spanish

ISSUP Colombia

ISSUP Colombia wants to invite you to its Webinar on Stigma

Time : 11:30AM Colombia Time

Register for the webinar

 

It is widely recognized that stigma towards People who Use Drugs (PUD) is a generator of inequalities, social exclusion, discrimination, (RIOD, 2019b), as well as an important generator of exclusion that limits access to health services (Pan American Health Organization World Health Organization, 2005; Tirado, A., 2019), which contributes to the detriment of people's possibility of recovery and affects their rights (Vásquez & Stolkiner, 2009).

Likewise, stigmatizing attitudes of health personnel towards users with different health problems have been reported, finding that the consumption of tobacco, marijuana, cocaine and alcohol were the most judged behaviors (Ronzani et al, 2009), which suggests a differential treatment between drug use problems and other health problems, making many health professionals and social sciences not very willing to care for patients with addictions (McLaughlin et al, 2006).

In this sense, the Webinar aims to consider findings from local (Medellín-Colombia) and international research that show how the stigmatizing attitudes of professionals who have contact with people who use drugs affect their professional practice.

Speakers:

Andrés Felipe Tirado Otálvaro. Ph.D. 
Doctor in Public Health. Full Professor, Faculty of Nursing, Care Research Group. Pontifical Bolivarian University. Medellin-Colombia

Silverio Espinal. Psychologist. 
Head of the Technical Division. Surge Corporation. Medellin-Colombia 

 

 

Webinars and online events presented and organized by the International Society of Substance Use Professionals (ISSUP) are provided for informational purposes only. They are educational in nature and do not constitute medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.