Home > Looking beyond drugs: a scoping review of recovery in the context of illicit substance use among adolescents and young adults.

Eekhoudt, Cameron R and Sandhu, Monique and Mniszak, Caroline and Goodyear, Trevor and Turuba, Roxanne and Marchand, Kirsten and Barbic, Skye and Fast, Danya (2024) Looking beyond drugs: a scoping review of recovery in the context of illicit substance use among adolescents and young adults. International Journal of Drug Policy, 133, 104598. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2024.104598.

External website: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/...

BACKGROUND Despite extensive literature exploring the harms associated with illicit substance use among young people who use drugs (YPWUD), the concept of "recovery" among this population has received significantly less attention. Addressing this literature gap can inform efforts to better support YPWUD as they pursue their goals.

OBJECTIVE To examine the qualitative literature on how young people (< 30 years of age) understand and navigate substance use recovery and healing in the context of illicit substance use, including how interventions and caregivers are implicated in these processes.

METHODS The design for this scoping review was guided by Arksey and O'Malley's framework and informed by Levac et al. refinements. We surveyed five bibliographic databases for English, peer-reviewed, empirical studies published between 1999 and 2023. Studies were independently reviewed by two reviewers. We charted, synthesized, and assessed studies for common themes.

FINDINGS A total of 28 articles met the inclusion criteria for this scoping review. Studies show varied definitions and enactments of recovery as part of a continuum of substance use care, frequently extending beyond the notion of recovery as abstinence. Caregivers providing emotional, material, and social support are crucial to recovery; however, the challenges of supporting a young person's recovery are manifold, including misaligned expectations about recovery definitions and processes.

CONCLUSION Findings underscore the need for recovery-oriented care that aligns with young people's diverse and shifting needs, goals, and contexts. Recovery programs must range from harm reduction to abstinence-based approaches across institutional and non-institutional settings and actively engage YPWUD and caregivers.


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