10 results on '"Hopwood, Max"'
Search Results
2. Stigma, Anxiety, and Depression Among Gay and Bisexual Men in Mixed-Orientation Marriages
- Author
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Hopwood, Max, Cama, Elena, de Wit, John, Treloar, Carla, Public Health, Social Policy and Public Health, and Leerstoel de Wit
- Subjects
bisexuals ,in-depth interviews ,mental health and illness ,stigma ,depression ,gender ,sexual health ,Australia ,masculinity ,families ,men's health ,sexuality ,qualitative methods - Abstract
The mental health of gay and bisexual men in mixed-orientation marriages is poorly understood. In this article, the authors explore the development of anxiety and depression among gay and bisexual men in heterosexual marriages. Sixteen men, living in the Australian states of New South Wales, Queensland, Victoria, and Tasmania were interviewed throughout 2016 and 2017. An analysis of interviews identified four main themes, namely, compulsory heterosexuality, existential distress, compartmentalization, and integration and resolution. Participants reported experiencing anxiety and depression, which were exacerbated by the stigmatization of same-sex attraction and by an overwhelming distress from feelings of shame and guilt regarding their marital infidelity. Findings indicate that gay and bisexual men in mixed-orientation marriages develop anxiety and depression in response to the exigencies of compulsory heterosexuality and the compartmentalizing of same-sex attraction and identity during heterosexual marriage. Coming-out as same-sex attracted resolved men's distress by facilitating an integrative self-structure.
- Published
- 2020
3. Predictors of health care workers’ support for discriminatory treatment and care of people who inject drugs
- Author
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Brener, Loren, Cama, Elena, Broady, Timothy, Hopwood, Max, de Wit, John, Treloar, Carla, Leerstoel de Wit, Public Health, Leerstoel de Wit, and Public Health
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Health Personnel ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Quality care ,health care workers ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Substance Abuse, Intravenous ,Psychiatry ,injecting drug use ,Applied Psychology ,media_common ,Stereotyping ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,030227 psychiatry ,Clinical Psychology ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Feeling ,stigma ,Attitudes ,Female ,Psychology ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,discrimination - Abstract
Complex lifestyle issues associated with injecting drug use may make it difficult to provide care to people who inject drugs (PWID). Negative attitudes towards PWID can undermine the provision of good quality care, hence, it is important to explore the impact of health workers' attitudes in the delivery of care to PWID. An online survey was administered to 336 health workers assessing contact with and attitudes towards PWID, concerns about these clients as well as whether health workers feel stigmatised by working with PWID. Health workers were also asked whether they supported the discriminatory behaviour of a colleague in a series of hypothetical scenarios about working with PWID. In correlational analyses, negative attitudes towards PWID, greater concerns about the behaviour of PWID, not feeling stigmatised by colleagues and seeing fewer clients who inject were associated with greater support for discriminatory actions in the hypothetical scenarios. Multiple regression analysis results showed that only attitudes towards PWID and concerns about the behaviour of injecting clients remain independent predictors of participant support for the hypothetical scenarios. This research highlights the role of attitudes toward PWID in understanding health workers' decisions, practices and potential behaviour.
- Published
- 2019
4. Comparing Australian health worker and student attitudes and concerns about providing care to people living with hepatitis B.
- Author
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Brener, Loren, Cama, Elena, Broady, Tim, Hopwood, Max, Treloar, Carla, and Trevena, Helen
- Abstract
Issue addressed: Hepatitis B (HBV) is a major public health issue with over 250 million people chronically infected worldwide. In Australia, prevalence is higher among migrant communities and these groups may be reticent to attend health care services due to concerns about experiencing stigma and discrimination. The way health workers perceive their clients, particularly those of migrant backgrounds, may influence the way they treat these clients and the quality of care provided. This study investigated and compared the attitudes and concerns health workers and health students have towards working with clients living with HBV. Methods: Health workers (n = 551) and students (n = 199) completed an online survey which investigated attitudes towards people living with HBV, comfort with providing care for these clients and concerns they have about working with them. Results: Health students expressed less comfort (U = 47 611, z = −2.73, P =.006) and reported more concerns about working with people with HBV than qualified health workers (U = 61611.50, z = 2.64, P =.008). Students' concerns were centred around their own ability to provide care rather than issues related to clients. There were no differences in overall attitudes towards people living with HBV between health workers and students. Conclusion: To address concerns that health workers and students may have in working with people living with HBV, particularly those from migrant communities, and to ensure that health workers feel comfortable and confident, HBV workforce development should be included in undergraduate and postgraduate training programmes as well as in continuing professional education. So what?: This will assist the health workforce to develop competency in the treatment of people living with HBV, with the ultimate aim of providing best quality, non‐judgemental care to all people living with HBV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Australian health and medical workers' concerns around providing care to people living with hepatitis B.
- Author
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Cama, Elena, Brener, Loren, Broady, Timothy, Hopwood, Max, and Treloar, Carla
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HEPATITIS B treatment ,MEDICAL quality control ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,INTERNET ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,MEDICAL personnel ,MEDICAL care ,PATIENTS ,SOCIAL stigma ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
There is established literature on health workers' attitudes towards working with people living with stigmatised health conditions and behaviours, such as HIV, hepatitis C and injecting drug use. Less is known about health workers' attitudes and concerns around providing care to people living with hepatitis B virus (HBV), which is concerning as research indicates that negative attitudes may impact on the quality of care provided to these populations, with adverse health outcomes for clients. The aim of this paper is to examine health and medical workers' concerns about providing care to people living with HBV, and the factors that may influence these concerns. Australian health and medical workers (n = 551) completed an online survey measuring their concerns about providing care to people living with HBV, stigmatising attitudes towards this group, perceived comfort of themselves and colleagues in providing care towards clients with HBV, and witnessing their colleagues behaviour in a discriminatory way towards clients with HBV. Multiple regression was used to ascertain factors predictive of health workers' concerns about working with clients with HBV. Results showed that older participants and those who had spent less time working in the health and medical field had greater concerns about caring for people living with HBV. Workers who did not know someone living with HBV, who were less comfortable around clients with HBV, who perceived their colleagues to be less comfortable working with clients with HBV, and who had more negative attitudes towards this group also had greater concerns around providing care to people living with HBV. Efforts should be made to improve health and medical workers' attitudes towards working with people with HBV. This may also improve workers' level of comfort with people with HBV and reduce the reported reticence they have towards working with this client group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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6. Health workers’ support for hepatitis C treatment uptake among clients with a history of injecting.
- Author
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Brener, Loren, Wilson, Hannah, Hopwood, Max, and von Hippel, Courtney
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METHADONE treatment programs ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,HEPATITIS C ,MEDICAL personnel ,SURVEYS ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,SOCIAL support ,TERMINATION of treatment ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Hepatitis C virus is stigmatised because of its association with injecting drug use. Although treatment is available, uptake remains low, especially among people who inject drugs. Ninety health workers completed a survey assessing attitudes towards people who inject drugs and support for treatment for three client scenarios: one who stopped injecting, one on methadone, and one continuing to inject. Support for hepatitis C virus treatment was significantly higher, where the client was not injecting. Participants who showed more negative attitudes towards people who inject drugs were less supportive of clients entering hepatitis C virus treatment, illustrating the influence of health workers’ attitudes in determining treatment options offered to clients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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7. Experiences of hepatitis C treatment and its management: What some patients and health professionals say
- Author
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Hopwood, Max, Treloar, Carla, and Redsull, Louise
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Stigma ,Resilience ,Discrimination ,Treatments ,Healthcare workers ,Disclosure ,Coping ,Support ,Side effects ,Hepatitis C - Abstract
A qualitative study of both hepatitis C treatment experiences and the management of hepatitis C treatment, using in-depth semi-structured interviews, was conducted in Sydney, Australia, during 2004 and 2005. The study aimed to uncover some of the strategies that people in treatment deployed to cope with the side effects associated with treatment. A purposive sampling frame was used to recruit participants to the study. A total of 20 people who either were receiving treatment or had completed treatment within the six months prior to interview were recruited. Six health professionals who managed treatment regimens were also interviewed. Treatment and its side effects were explored from the perspectives of both patients and clinic staff. The impact of treatment on personal relationships, work, socialising, physical and emotional health and wellbeing, sense of self and future outlook were investigated. Thematic content analysis highlighted key issues reported by patients and health professionals regarding treatment experiences and approaches to treatment management., Monograph 4/2006
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- 2006
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8. “Why Am I the Way I Am?” Narrative Work in the Context of Stigmatized Identities.
- Author
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Rance, Jake, Gray, Rebecca, and Hopwood, Max
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SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors ,INTERVIEWING ,CASE studies ,MOTHER-child relationship ,REMINISCENCE ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL stigma ,STORYTELLING ,SECONDARY analysis ,INTRAVENOUS drug abusers ,NARRATIVES - Abstract
There are particular complexities faced by people attempting to tell their stories in the context of social stigma, such as the hostility which often surrounds injecting drug use. In this article, we identify some of the distinct advantages of taking a narrative approach to understanding these complexities by exploring a single case study, across two life-history interviews, with “Jimmy,” a young man with a history of social disadvantage, incarceration, and heroin dependence. Drawing on Miranda Fricker’s notion of “hermeneutical injustice,” we consider the effects of stigmatization on the sociocultural practice of storytelling. We note the way Jimmy appears both constrained and released by his story—how he conforms to but also resists the master narrative of the “drug user.” Narrative analysis, we conclude, honors the complex challenges of the accounting work evident in interviews such as Jimmy’s, providing a valuable counterpoint to other forms of qualitative inquiry in the addictions field. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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9. Stigma as understood by key informants: A social ecological approach to gay and bisexual men's use of crystal methamphetamine for sex.
- Author
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Treloar, Carla, Hopwood, Max, Drysdale, Kerryn, Lea, Toby, Holt, Martin, Dowsett, Gary W, Aggleton, Peter, and Bryant, Joanne
- Subjects
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METHAMPHETAMINE , *GAY people , *BISEXUAL men , *DRUG abuse , *ANTI-drug advertising , *HIV prevention , *BISEXUALITY , *RESEARCH , *HUMAN sexuality , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL stigma , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *HOMOSEXUALITY , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DRUGS - Abstract
This paper explores the perceptions of 35 key informants (KIs) in a range of relevant health and community sectors regarding the stigmatisation of GBM's crystal methamphetamine use and sexual practice with view to informing stigma reduction efforts. A modified social ecological model was used to guide analysis and interpretation. At the individual level, KI participants indicated that crystal methamphetamine was used by some GBM to reduce the effects of internalised stigma. At the network level, KIs thought that some drugs and types of use could attract more stigma and that this could erode support from GBM networks for men who use crystal. KIs felt that few "mainstream" organisations could provide appropriate services for GBM who use crystal and furthermore, that there was significant work to "undo" misperceptions of the harms of crystal use. At the policy level, mass media anti-drug campaigns were seen to be a significant generator of stigma with irrelevant and patronising messages that lacked useful information. Efforts to reduce stigma about crystal methamphetamine use amongst GBM must address individual, network, organisation and policy issues and be underpinned by understandings of social power in relation to sex, sexuality, drug use, infectious status and sexual minorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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10. The politics of place(ment): Problematising the provision of hepatitis C treatment within opiate substitution clinics
- Author
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Rance, Jake, Newland, Jamee, Hopwood, Max, and Treloar, Carla
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FOCUS groups , *HEPATITIS C , *INTERVIEWING , *THEMATIC analysis , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Abstract: The hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemic is a significant public health challenge in Australia. Current initiatives to expand access to HCV treatment focus on opiate substitution therapy (OST) settings where the prevalence of hepatitis C among clients is high. In Australia, the provision of OST for many clients is via large clinics, with an estimated median of 150 clients per service. Conceptually informed by the work of Michel Foucault, our analysis of the proposed integrated treatment model focuses on the critical but overlooked question of organisational culture and power operating within OST. We argue that the specific context of OST not merely reflects but actively participates in the political economy of social exclusion via which the socio-spatial segregation and stigmatisation of the service user as ‘drug user’ is enacted. This paper analyses data collected from two samples during 2008/9: OST clients living in New South Wales, Australia and a range of OST health professionals working in Australian settings. In total, 27 interviews were conducted with current OST clients; 19 by phone and 8 face-to-face. One focus group and 16 telephone interviews were conducted with OST health professionals. Our analysis of key themes emerging from the interview data suggests that the successful introduction of HCV treatment within the OST clinic is not a given. We are concerned that particular areas of tension, if not explicit contradiction, have been overlooked in current research and debates informing the proposed combination treatment model. We question the appropriateness of co-locating a notoriously arduous, exacting treatment (HCV) within the highly surveillant and regulatory environment of OST. While applauding the intention to improve access to HCV care and treatment for people who inject drugs we caution against a treatment model that risks further entrenching (socio-spatial) stigmatisation amongst those already experiencing significant marginalisation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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