Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Addiction Science & Clinical Practice

Abstract

Background: There is increasing attention in clinician care to the importance of using person-first language. Clinicians' words can reinforce clinicians' pre-existing stigmas and biases. People who use drugs (PWUD) continue to face stigma from clinicians. Person-first language is a way to reduce stigma and perpetuation of bias.

Methods: Through specific structured in-person interviews, we examined the usage of stigmatizing language in the care of PWUD by surveying key clinicians- such as physicians, nurses, and social workers-and patients who self-identified as PWUD at Tufts Medical Center (Boston, MA) between July 2022-September 2022. Interview guides were created using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) 2.0 as a framework. We evaluated perceptions of person-first language and barriers to using person-first language amongst participants. Interviews were coded with Dedoose Software and inductive thematic analysis (ITA) methods were used until all themes were captured; CFIR 2.0 determinants used during interview guide creation were used as preliminary themes and modified as needed.

Results: We interviewed thirty-four people, including eleven PWUD at time of interview. Most clinicians agreed that language is important and matters when talking to patients and during documentation. Almost all patients agreed that language was important to them and impacted their relationship with their provider. However, there were responders that felt that person-first language was unnecessary, ineffective, and overly verbose in the medical setting. Major barriers to using person-first language were unawareness, lack of formal training, and perceived generational differences in appropriate language.

Conclusion: Addressing language usage is a critical opportunity to promote inclusion and reduce bias amongst PWUD. As medical charts become increasingly accessible by patients, the use of language by the clinician becomes increasingly important. To create and maintain equitable systems of care, it is important to meet clinicians where they are at and to work with them to address these issues. This can include targeted educational sessions and resources informing clinicians on preferred language use and curriculum for providers-in-training.

DOI

10.1186/s13722-025-00591-w

Publication Date

9-2-2025

Keywords

PWUD, Stigma, Person-first language, Qualitative research

ISSN

1940-0640

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