“There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits

Abstract Background Buprenorphine (BUP) treatment has been successfully integrated into primary care and other general medical settings; however, potential BUP prescribers frequently report inadequate training and resources to provide psychosocial counseling as barriers to providing care. Group medi...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mariya Masyukova, Benjamin T. Hayes, Teresa López-Castro, Aaron D. Fox
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-02-01
Series:Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-025-00540-7
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823861715710771200
author Mariya Masyukova
Benjamin T. Hayes
Teresa López-Castro
Aaron D. Fox
author_facet Mariya Masyukova
Benjamin T. Hayes
Teresa López-Castro
Aaron D. Fox
author_sort Mariya Masyukova
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Buprenorphine (BUP) treatment has been successfully integrated into primary care and other general medical settings; however, potential BUP prescribers frequently report inadequate training and resources to provide psychosocial counseling as barriers to providing care. Group medical visits, which combine psychosocial support and chronic condition management, have been described for BUP treatment, but few studies have explored what is gained and/or lost by offering BUP treatment in groups instead of individual visits. Methods Five focus groups with 3–11 participants each were conducted at an urban community health center that housed a mature office-based BUP treatment program. Participants were persons with opioid use disorder (OUD) who had previously received BUP treatment. A semi-structured interview guide covered the following domains: experience with BUP, experience with group counseling, and preferences for BUP in a group format or individual setting. Qualitative analysis followed a modified grounded theory approach. Results Of 33 participants, 28 were male, median age range was 50–54, 20 identified as Hispanic/Latinx, and 24 reported past experiences with substance use disorder treatment groups. Four main themes were: (1) Groups can address the psychological aspects of addiction; (2) Groups introduce positive peer support; (3) Balancing OUD treatment and management of other chronic conditions; (4) Groups must be voluntary. Conclusions Findings demonstrate that many persons with OUD taking BUP desire assistance with recovery skills, peer support, and learning about the risks and benefits of BUP. Group medical visits can efficiently deliver these services in primary care, but findings also emphasize that group counseling will be best received when voluntary and group members are committed and authentic.
format Article
id doaj-art-49f92f9c00b7467a967973d88ba7d4d0
institution Kabale University
issn 1940-0640
language English
publishDate 2025-02-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
spelling doaj-art-49f92f9c00b7467a967973d88ba7d4d02025-02-09T12:49:13ZengBMCAddiction Science & Clinical Practice1940-06402025-02-012011910.1186/s13722-025-00540-7“There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visitsMariya Masyukova0Benjamin T. Hayes1Teresa López-Castro2Aaron D. Fox3Project Renewal, IncAlbert Einstein College of MedicineThe City College of New YorkAlbert Einstein College of MedicineAbstract Background Buprenorphine (BUP) treatment has been successfully integrated into primary care and other general medical settings; however, potential BUP prescribers frequently report inadequate training and resources to provide psychosocial counseling as barriers to providing care. Group medical visits, which combine psychosocial support and chronic condition management, have been described for BUP treatment, but few studies have explored what is gained and/or lost by offering BUP treatment in groups instead of individual visits. Methods Five focus groups with 3–11 participants each were conducted at an urban community health center that housed a mature office-based BUP treatment program. Participants were persons with opioid use disorder (OUD) who had previously received BUP treatment. A semi-structured interview guide covered the following domains: experience with BUP, experience with group counseling, and preferences for BUP in a group format or individual setting. Qualitative analysis followed a modified grounded theory approach. Results Of 33 participants, 28 were male, median age range was 50–54, 20 identified as Hispanic/Latinx, and 24 reported past experiences with substance use disorder treatment groups. Four main themes were: (1) Groups can address the psychological aspects of addiction; (2) Groups introduce positive peer support; (3) Balancing OUD treatment and management of other chronic conditions; (4) Groups must be voluntary. Conclusions Findings demonstrate that many persons with OUD taking BUP desire assistance with recovery skills, peer support, and learning about the risks and benefits of BUP. Group medical visits can efficiently deliver these services in primary care, but findings also emphasize that group counseling will be best received when voluntary and group members are committed and authentic.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-025-00540-7BuprenorphinePsychosocial counselingGroup counselingGroup medical visitsShared medical appointmentsOpioid use disorder
spellingShingle Mariya Masyukova
Benjamin T. Hayes
Teresa López-Castro
Aaron D. Fox
“There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Buprenorphine
Psychosocial counseling
Group counseling
Group medical visits
Shared medical appointments
Opioid use disorder
title “There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits
title_full “There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits
title_fullStr “There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits
title_full_unstemmed “There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits
title_short “There’s always somebody that you can identify with”: a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits
title_sort there s always somebody that you can identify with a qualitative study of patient perspectives on buprenorphine group medical visits
topic Buprenorphine
Psychosocial counseling
Group counseling
Group medical visits
Shared medical appointments
Opioid use disorder
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13722-025-00540-7
work_keys_str_mv AT mariyamasyukova theresalwayssomebodythatyoucanidentifywithaqualitativestudyofpatientperspectivesonbuprenorphinegroupmedicalvisits
AT benjaminthayes theresalwayssomebodythatyoucanidentifywithaqualitativestudyofpatientperspectivesonbuprenorphinegroupmedicalvisits
AT teresalopezcastro theresalwayssomebodythatyoucanidentifywithaqualitativestudyofpatientperspectivesonbuprenorphinegroupmedicalvisits
AT aarondfox theresalwayssomebodythatyoucanidentifywithaqualitativestudyofpatientperspectivesonbuprenorphinegroupmedicalvisits