Association between nurses’ knowledge and attitudes and caring behaviors toward people with opioid use disorder
Inyene Edem Essien-Aleksi, Yuan Zhang, Don Roosan, Tracie McPadden, Leslie Rideout, Michael Martin, Paula-Jo Beniers, Amy Lund, Danielle Leone-Sheehan, Alysse Wurcel, Majed Alamri, Majed Alamri, Majed Alamri, Majed Alamri, Majed Alamri

TL;DR
Hospital nurses with less knowledge and more negative attitudes toward opioid use disorder show less caring behavior, suggesting education and empathy training could improve patient care.
Contribution
This study identifies a novel link between nurses’ knowledge, attitudes, and caring behaviors toward patients with opioid use disorder in hospital settings.
Findings
Higher DDPPQ scores (lower knowledge and more negative attitudes) were significantly associated with lower caring behaviors (CBI-6 scores).
Nurses in permanent night shifts reported the highest caring behaviors.
The association between DDPPQ and CBI-6 scores remained significant after adjusting for shift type, experience, and hospital site.
Abstract
Hospital nurses are crucial in inpatient OUD care, but knowledge gaps and negative attitudes may affect care quality. Few studies have examined the relationship between nurses’ knowledge and attitudes and their caring behaviors toward patients with OUD in hospital settings. We conducted a descriptive, exploratory cross-sectional study among hospital nurses at two northeast U.S hospitals. To explore nurses’ perspectives, we used validated instruments to assess knowledge and attitudes [DDPPQ] and caring behaviors [CBI-6]. DDPPQ and CBI-6 scores were treated as ordinal composite measures and summarized using medians and interquartile ranges. Group differences were examined across demographic and work-related factors using Mann–Whitney U and Kruskal–Wallis tests. Associations between DDPPQ and CBI-6 scores were analyzed using Spearman’s rank correlation with bootstrapped confidence…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpioid Use Disorder Treatment · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · HIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk
