446 results
Search Results
2. Response to the Hammoud et al paper on ‘the new MTV generation’
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Gafos, Mitzy, Chas, Julie, and Pialoux, Gilles
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- 2018
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3. Call for Papers Themed Collection Parents and substance use; management of risky parenthood
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- 2017
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4. Call for Paper: Themed Collection: Sexualised drug use: LGBT communities and beyond
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- 2017
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5. Call for Papers
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- 2014
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6. Positive effects of community attachment on internalised stigma and wellbeing among people who inject drugs
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Brener, Loren, Broady, Timothy, Cama, Elena, Hopwood, Max, Byrne, Jude, and Treloar, Carla
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- 2021
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7. Reprint of: Why Vietnam continues to impose the death penalty for drug offences: A narrative commentary
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Luong, Hai Thanh
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- 2021
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8. Why Vietnam continues to impose the death penalty for drug offences: A narrative commentary
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Luong, Hai Thanh
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- 2021
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9. Rethinking ‘flexibilities’ in the international drug control system—Potential, precedents and models for reforms
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Collins, John
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- 2018
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10. Effects of strength of relationship ties in recovery homes: A conundrum
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Jason, Leonard A., Light, John M., Bobak, Ted, and Bell, Justin
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- 2024
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11. Reducing alcohol harms whilst minimising impact on hospitality businesses: 'Sweetspot' policy options.
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Fitzgerald, Niamh, O'Donnell, Rachel, Uny, Isabelle, Martin, Jack G., Cook, Megan, Graham, Kathryn, Stockwell, Tim, Hughes, Karen, Wilkinson, Claire, McGill, Elizabeth, Miller, Peter G., Reynolds, Jo, Quigg, Zara, and Angus, Colin
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VIOLENCE prevention , *ALCOHOLIC beverages , *RESTAURANTS , *LOBBYING , *HEALTH policy , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *BUSINESS , *HARM reduction , *ALCOHOL drinking , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
• Alcohol policies that protect public health do not necessarily harm bars. • 'Sweetspot' policies are those which can improve public health without affecting hospitality businesses. • There is good evidence that increasing the price of shop-bought alcohol is a sweetspot policy. • Restricting remote/online alcohol sales is also a likely sweetspot policy. • Measures to shape or manage the night-time economy are less well supported by evidence. During COVID-19, hospitality businesses (e.g. bars, restaurants) were closed/restricted whilst off-sales of alcohol increased, with health consequences. Post-covid, governments face lobbying to support such businesses, but many health services remain under pressure. We appraised 'sweetspot' policy options: those with potential to benefit public services and health, whilst avoiding or minimising negative impact on the hospitality sector. We conducted rapid non-systematic evidence reviews using index papers, citation searches and team knowledge to summarise the literature relating to four possible 'sweetspot' policy areas: pricing interventions (9 systematic reviews (SR); 14 papers/reports); regulation of online sales (1 SR; 1 paper); place-shaping (2 SRs; 18 papers/reports); and violence reduction initiatives (9 SRs; 24 papers/reports); and led two expert workshops (n = 11). Interventions that raise the price of cheaper shop-bought alcohol appear promising as 'sweetspot' policies; any impact on hospitality is likely small and potentially positive. Restrictions on online sales such as speed or timing of delivery may reduce harm and diversion of consumption from on-trade to home settings. Place-shaping is not well-supported by evidence and experts were sceptical. Reduced late-night trading hours likely reduce violence; evidence of impact on hospitality is scant. Other violence reduction initiatives may modestly reduce harms whilst supporting hospitality, but require resources to deliver multiple measures simultaneously in partnership. Available evidence and expert views point to regulation of pricing and online sales as having greatest potential as 'sweetspot' alcohol policies, reducing alcohol harm whilst minimising negative impact on hospitality businesses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Towards a social harm approach in drug policy.
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Dertadian, George Christopher and Askew, Rebecca
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DRUG control , *POLICY sciences , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SCHOLARLY method , *SOCIAL justice , *CRIMINOLOGY , *HARM reduction , *PUNISHMENT , *CRIMINAL justice system , *ONTOLOGIES (Information retrieval) - Abstract
In this paper, we explore how the social harm approach can be adapted within drug policy scholarship. Since the mid-2000s, a group of critical criminologists have moved beyond the concept of crime and criminology, towards the study of social harm. This turn proceeds decades of research that highlights the inequities within the criminal legal system, the formation of laws that protect the privileged and punish the disadvantaged, and the systemic challenge of the effectiveness of retribution and punishment at addressing harm in the community. The purpose of this paper is to first identify parallels between the social harm approach and critical drug scholarship, and second to advocate for the adoption of a social harm lens in drug policy scholarship. In the paper, we draw out the similarities between social harm and drug policy literatures, as well as outline what the study of social harm can bring to an analysis of drug policy. This includes a discussion on the ontology of drug crime, the myth of drug crime and the ineffective use of the crime control system in response to drug use. The paper then discusses how these conversations in critical criminology and critical drugs scholarship can be brought together to inform future drug policy research. This reflection details the link between social harm and the impingement of human flourishing, explores the role of decolonizing drug policy, advocates for the centralization of lived experience within the research process and outlines how this might align with harm reduction approaches. We conclude by arguing that the social harm approach challenges the idea that neutrality is the goal in drug policy and explicitly seeks to expand new avenues in activist research and social justice approaches to policymaking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. How is alcohol consumption and heavy episodic drinking spread across different types of drinking occasion in Great Britain: An event-level latent class analysis.
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Holmes, John, Sasso, Alessandro, Hernández Alava, Mónica, Borges Neves, Rita, Stevely, Abigail K, Warde, Alan, and Meier, Petra S
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CROSS-sectional method , *ALCOHOLIC beverages , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *DISEASE prevalence , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *HOME environment , *ALCOHOL drinking , *ALCOHOLISM - Abstract
• Latent class analyses identify 15 types of drinking in Great Britain in 2019. • Alcohol consumption varies substantially across types of occasion. • Occasions that span the off-trade and on-trade involve particularly heavy drinking. • Heavy drinking is common across most occasion types, but so is moderate drinking. • Most heavy drinking takes place in off-trade only drinking occasions. This paper aimed to (i) update a previous typology of British alcohol drinking occasions using a more recent and expanded dataset and revised modelling procedure, and (ii) estimate the average consumption level, prevalence of heavy drinking, and distribution of all alcohol consumption and heavy drinking within and across occasion types. The paper uses a cross-sectional latent class analysis of event-level diary data that includes characteristics of 43,089 drinking occasions in 2019 reported by 17,821 adult drinkers in Great Britain. The latent class indicators are characteristics of off-trade only (e.g. home), on-trade only (e.g. bar) and mixed trade (e.g. home and bar) drinking occasions. These describe companions, locations, purpose, motivation, accompanying activities, timings, consumption volume in units (1 UK unit = 8g ethanol) and beverages consumed. The analysis identified four off-trade only, eight on-trade only and three mixed-trade occasion types (i.e. latent classes). Mean consumption per occasion varied between 4.4 units in Family meals to 17.7 units in Big nights out with pre-loading. It exceeded ten units in all mixed-trade occasion types and in Off-trade get togethers, Big nights out and Male friends at the pub. Three off-trade types accounted for 50.8% of all alcohol consumed and 51.8% of heavy drinking occasions: Quiet drink at home alone, Evening at home with partner and Off-trade get togethers. For thirteen out of fifteen occasion types, more than 25% of occasions involved heavy drinking. Conversely, 41.7% of Big nights out and 16.4% of Big nights out with preloading were not heavy drinking occasions. Alcohol consumption varies substantially across and within fifteen types of drinking occasion in Great Britain. Heavy drinking is common in most occasion types. However, moderate drinking is also common in occasion types often characterised as heavy drinking practices. Mixed-trade drinking occasions are particularly likely to involve heavy drinking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. The role of gifts in building influence with politicians: Thematic analysis of interviews with current and former parliamentarians.
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Rodriguez, Ara Marie Leal, Adams, Peter J., Sayes, Edwin, and Kypri, Kypros
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INTERVIEWING , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SOCIAL attitudes , *THEMATIC analysis , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *GIFT giving , *PARLIAMENTARY practice - Abstract
Gifts are a powerful way to acknowledge and strengthen interpersonal relationships. As with any relational space, gifting plays various roles in forming and maintaining relationships in political contexts, but its contribution to relationship-building has attracted little attention. This paper examines how politicians in Aotearoa New Zealand both engage with gifting and how they navigate the perceptions of others. Four current members of parliament (MPs) and six retired MPs participated in semi-structured interviews with questions on common practices and common understandings about political gifting. Their responses indicate their use of four different processes: formal processes are the guidelines provided by the government on gifting, but when these are insufficient, contextual processes regarding perceptions of the media, constituents or colleagues are used, or, alternatively, MPs rely on personal values or view gifting in terms of transactional processes with both parties receiving benefits. The paper explores perceptions and complexities of a sequence of gifts during events (event gifting). The authors recommend an improved awareness and understanding of the contribution of gifting practices to political relationship building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. A social cost perspective in the wake of the Portuguese strategy for the fight against drugs
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Gonçalves, Ricardo, Lourenço, Ana, and Silva, Sofia Nogueira da
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- 2015
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16. “Maintaining HIV and HCV prevention and care for people who inject drugs despite COVID‐19 in Hai Phong, Vietnam”
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Giang, Hoang Thi, Duc, Nguyen Quang, Molès, Jean-Pierre, Vinh, Vu Hai, Nagot, Nicolas, Thanh, Nham Thi Tuyet, Huong, Duong Thi, Oanh, Khuat Thi Hai, Khue, Pham Minh, Mai, Le Sao, Trang, Nguyen Thu, Ngoc, Pham Thi, Quillet, Catherine, Feelemyer, Jonathan, Vallo, Roselyne, Michel, Laurent, Jarlais, Don Des, Laureillard, Didier, and Rapoud, Delphine
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- 2022
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17. The estimated costs and benefits of a hypothetical supervised consumption site in Providence, Rhode Island
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Chambers, Laura C., Hallowell, Benjamin D., Zang, Xiao, Rind, David M., Guzauskas, Greg F., Hansen, Ryan N., Fuchs, Nathaniel, Scagos, Rachel P., and Marshall, Brandon D.L.
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- 2022
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18. Antisocial behavior in football matches: Do changes in alcohol sales policy increase violent acts?
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da Silva Dantas, Marke Geisy, Sampaio, Luciano Menezes Bezerra, and Gasparetto, Thadeu
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SOCCER fans , *DELINQUENT behavior , *RISK of violence , *ALCOHOLIC beverages , *RISK assessment , *GOVERNMENT policy , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SPORTS events , *ANTISOCIAL personality disorders , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *POLICY sciences - Abstract
Background: The violent behavior of football fans is constantly associated with their drinking habits. Aiming to reduce its impact, policy makers often ban the sales and consumption of alcohol beverages during matches. Nonetheless, there are few papers that empirically analyzed such relationship, and our paper aims to shed light on this question. Methods: Out dataset comprises 4,560 matches from the first and second tiers of the Brazilian League, where 245 exhibited at least one antisocial behavior from fans. Ordered logistic regressions are used as method. Results: Our empirical findings evidence that the sales of alcoholic drinks do increase the likelihood of severe antisocial behavior. We also observed a higher likelihood of violent cases when the home club loses its match as well as during crowded matches. Conclusions: We conclude that the change in the alcohol police in Brazil did show a significant association with the likelihood of antisocial behavior among football fans. However, since the magnitude of such effect is small, further research is needed to examine the potential benefits of this policy change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. "It's a big added stress on top of being so ill": The challenges facing people prescribed cannabis in the UK.
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Beckett Wilson, Helen and Metcalf McGrath, Lindsey
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HEALTH services accessibility , *CAREGIVERS , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *SOCIAL stigma , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *QUALITATIVE research , *MEDICAL marijuana , *DRUGS , *THEMATIC analysis , *POLICY sciences , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
• UK law changed in 2018 to permit cannabis prescribing. Cannabis remains otherwise criminalised. Participants experienced benefits from cannabis across a broad range of conditions. • Most people who need a cannabis prescription in the UK still cannot access one. • Poor implementation of cannabis prescribing policy creates heath inequalities. • Intractable prohibition policy context continues to create social harms. This paper reports on the first qualitative study to interview people prescribed cannabis in the UK. Cannabis is a class B controlled substance under the 1971 Misuse of Drugs (MoD) Act, but a 2018 change to UK regulations provided for the prescription of cannabis for medical purposes. Relatively few people have been able to access a prescription, despite this policy change. This paper examines their experiences. Qualitative, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 24 people with a prescription for cannabis, or their carers. Data was analysed using a reflextive thematic analysis approach. The findings are discussed using a zemiology (social harms) perspective which provides a language for critical reflection on the current cannabis policy context. All participants reported that cannabis had significantly improved their mental and/or physical health, across a broad range of conditions. Many had been able to reduce their use of conventional medicines and reported that cannabis had relatively few side effects. Despite the potentially life-enhancing benefits of cannabis medicine, patients in the UK face multiple barriers to access. These include a lack of funding streams, bureaucratic supply problems, and a lack of training for doctors and police. Even for the few people able to obtain a prescription, the ongoing criminalisation of cannabis in the UK contributed to their experiences of stigmatisation. This often made it difficult and anxiety-inducing to take their medicine in public spaces. The UK government's lack of implementation of medical cannabis legalisation, combined with their ongoing prohibition position, is producing multiple harms to people who need cannabis medicine. The policy context is perpetuating stigmatising attitudes to cannabis which, as we demonstrate, contribute to social harms. We make recommendations on equality of patient access, and highlight the importance of education and policy change as means of combatting stigma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Synthetic cannabinoid use in an adult male prison in the UK.
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Craft, Sam, Austin, Alice, Tooth, Tom, Glover, Catherine, Garrett, Tina, Blagbrough, Ian S, Sunderland, Peter, Pudney, Christopher R, and Freeman, Tom P
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *PRISONERS , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *MEN , *SYNTHETIC drugs , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DRUG laws , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CANNABINOIDS , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *BRIEF Symptom Inventory , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress - Abstract
Synthetic cannabinoids (i.e. Spice) are a major public health problem in UK prisons, however, research in this area is limited. Here we aimed to draw comparisons between people with and without experience of using synthetic cannabinoids in prison, to characterise the features of, and motivations for use within this setting and evaluate support for different treatment interventions. Questionnaires were administered to 122 people in a category-B prison for adult males in England between July 2022 and March 2023. Participants were asked questions related to their sociodemographic and custodial characteristics, use of synthetic cannabinoids (and other drugs) inside and outside of prison and psychological distress was measured via the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18). Those that had ever used synthetic cannabinoids in prison completed additional questions related to features of use, motivations for use and support for various interventions. In total 46.7 % (n = 57) of participants reported use of synthetic cannabinoids in prison and this group experienced significantly greater levels of psychological distress compared to those reporting no use (mean (± standard deviation) BSI-18 scores = 23.7 (±16.7) vs 12.8 (±13.6), p < 0.001). Participants mostly reported using paper-based preparations (77.4 %) and use via e-cigarettes (75.9 %). The most strongly endorsed motivations for use included to alleviate boredom (91.1 % strongly agree/agree), to make the sentence pass faster (89.3 % strongly agree/agree) and to cope with stress (80.4 % strongly agree/agree). The interventions that received most support were strategies to better manage time and medication to manage withdrawal. The use of synthetic cannabinoids in UK prisons typically involves the use of paper-based preparations via e-cigarettes, and use is associated with greater levels of psychological distress. Motivations for use were mostly pragmatic (e.g. to alleviate boredom or cope with stress) and interventions should prioritise increasing the time individuals spend out of cells and in meaningful activity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. The movement and translation of drug policy ideas: The case of 'new recovery'.
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Thomas, Natalie, Bull, Melissa, Dioso-Villa, Rachel, and Smith, Kate
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PHARMACEUTICAL policy , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations , *BUSINESSPEOPLE , *ALCOHOL drinking , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry - Abstract
Introduction: 'New recovery' can be conceptualised as both a social movement and a broader policy agenda to restructure treatment service systems towards 'recovery-oriented systems of care'. Emerging initially out of the United States, new recovery has gained currency as a policy agenda in other jurisdictions - perhaps most distinctly in the United Kingdom. In 2012, the ideas behind 'new recovery' were debated in the Australian alcohol and other drug field as the Victorian government sought to incorporate recovery principles into policy and service design. This paper uses the policy transfer and policy translation literature to understand how international policy ideas about 'new recovery' were negotiated in the Australian context, focusing specifically on the role of non-government actors in the process.Methods: This paper draws on an analysis of policy documents, organisational documents and interviews with representatives from the Australian non-government alcohol and other drug sector to consider how new recovery was translated into Victorian drug policy.Results: The interactions between organisations and actors - including bureaucrats, governmental agencies and policy entrepreneurs - facilitated the circulation and translation of policy ideas in the Victorian context. Despite this, the analysis suggests that policy transfer was largely a symbolic exercise: overall, some of the key features of new recovery policy from the United States and the United Kingdom, such as encouraging peer-led recovery and mutual aid, were not incorporated in the Victorian policy. NGOs resisted what they considered to be some of the more problematic elements of 'new recovery', and informed the local translation of the policy.Discussion: The results have implications for understandings of the relationship between social movements, non-government organisations and the state, as well as the dynamics of knowledge transfer in drug policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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22. Should we smoke it for you as well? An ethnographic analysis of a drug cryptomarket environment.
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Kowalski, Michala, Hooker, Claire, and Barratt, Monica J.
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CRYPTOMARKETS , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis , *SELF-reliance , *LIMINALITY , *SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
Why aren't cryptomarkets more widely used? Researchers from a wide array of fields have attempted to answer this question by studying the size of drug cryptomarkets, the substances trafficked, and their structure. In this paper we address the potential acceptance of drug cryptomarkets by studying their perceived ease of use. This paper draws on observational data collected over 350 h of unstructured observation during an ethnographic study conducted in April–September 2016 of the two most prominent drug cryptomarkets at the time, in addition to seven face-to-face semi-structured qualitative interviews. Use of cryptomarkets relies on specialised knowledge. The administrators of the cryptomarkets do not play a publicly visible role in facilitating or easing cryptomarket use while simultaneously expecting cryptomarket users to exhibit self-reliance. We argue that the current levels of complexity and obfuscation constructed in the cryptomarket environment act as a barrier to the widespread acceptance of this technology. Through studying cryptomarkets' potential for widespread use we have shed light on current barriers to their growth requirement of specialised knowledge in order to use cryptomarkets and no public efforts to bridge the knowledge gap on behalf of cryptomarket administrators. As cryptomarkets continue to develop the ease of use of these platforms are bound to change, and with them the likelihood that cryptomarket usage may increase. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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23. The opioid crisis and the infrastructure of social capital.
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Sered, Susan Starr
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OPIOID abuse , *SOCIAL capital , *CULTURAL capital , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
This paper reflects upon ethnographic work carried out in a suburban Massachusetts town that has experienced particularly high rates of opioid mis/use. In open-ended conversations, residents attributed the local opioid crisis to institutional betrayals of various sorts. Building upon the idea that social capital tends to be health-enhancing, this paper traces the decline in the infrastructure of social capital and the associated decline in cultural capital or scripts for making sense out of life's challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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24. "I don't want to introduce it into new places in my life": The marketing and consumption of no and low alcohol drinks.
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Nicholls, Emily
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DEBATE , *SOCIAL change , *TEMPERANCE , *ALCOHOL drinking , *DRINKING behavior , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Recent years have seen an expanding 'no and low alcohol' (NoLo) drinks market in the United Kingdom and other high-income countries. With the UK government pledging to increase the availability of NoLos and encourage their consumption, further research is required to underpin policy and explore the potential for NoLos to ease – or exacerbate – alcohol-related harm. This paper draws on original primary research on NoLo marketing and consumption in the UK; analysis of two NoLo marketing campaigns and semi-structured interviews with both drinkers and non-drinkers who consume NoLos. Addition marketing was identified in the promotion of NoLo products, encouraging consumers to incorporate NoLo consumption into new spatial and temporal contexts on top of their typical weekly drinking patterns. However, there was resistance towards these practices from consumers, who stressed they were more likely to drink NoLos in place of alcohol and incorporate them into their existing drinking routines. This paper expands a currently very limited evidence base and contributes directly to ongoing debates around 'addition' versus 'substitution' (i.e. whether NoLo products are being used on top of or in place of alcohol). Findings highlight both some of the challenges and opportunities of the expanding market, pointing towards the problematic presence of 'addition marketing' but also highlighting the ways consumers might challenge this and use NoLos flexibly to reduce consumption. As a result, NoLo promotion could function as one tool amongst many to help at least some consumers drink in moderation, alongside a broader package of measures such as education and wider social change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. Is non-medical use normal? Normalisation, medicalisation and pharmaceutical consumption.
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Dertadian, George Christopher
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DRUGS of abuse laws , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PLEASURE , *RACE , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DRUG utilization , *SOCIAL skills - Abstract
The theory of the normalisation of youth drug use in advanced capitalist societies has had an enduring legacy in contemporary drug scholarship. While the literature on the normalisation of 'illicit' drugs is well developed, less has been written about application of the theory to emerging discourse of pharmaceutical 'abuse', and how this might necessitate different thinking around what can be considered normal consumption. Pharmaceuticals are not directly associated with criminality, and their use does not traditionally attract stigma. In fact, social science scholarship has illustrated how many substances deemed illicit are normalised in the context of an ever-growing set of medical treatments. This paper explores the assumptions about legality, sociality and pleasure which sit behind the drug normalisation thesis, by reflecting on the relevance of drug normalisation in relation to pharmaceuticals, as well as examining scholarship on the medicalisation of society and qualitative research on non-medical use to illustrate the parallel processes of normalisation that apply to pharmaceuticals. The paper argues that questions of normalisation in relation to pharmaceutical use require a deeper engagement with the normative expectations we attach to pleasure, consumption and medicine, and the way this is structured by proximity to medical authority, whiteness and middle-classness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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26. Development of an evidence-based hepatitis C education program to enhance public health literacy in the Australian prison sector: The Hepatitis in Prisons Education program (HepPEd).
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Sheehan, Yumi, Lafferty, Lise, Tedla, Nicodemus, Byrne, Marianne, Dawson, Olivia, Stewart, Sami, Leber, Bianca, Habraken, Nikitah, and Lloyd, Andrew R
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HEPATITIS C diagnosis , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *HEPATITIS C treatment , *HEALTH literacy , *JOB involvement , *CORRECTIONAL institutions , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *AFFINITY groups , *INFORMATION resources , *PRISONERS , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *HEPATITIS C , *PUBLIC health , *NEEDS assessment , *MEDICAL screening , *COMMITTEES , *TIME , *SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Australia's prisons have a high chronic hepatitis C (HCV) prevalence (8 %). Antiviral therapies and prison-based hepatitis services are available, but only a minority of those eligible are being treated. Improving the HCV public health literacy of the prison sector via targeted education may overcome key barriers to scale-up treatment. This paper describes the: i) HCV public health literacy of the prison setting; ii) barriers and solutions for HCV education and service engagement; iii) HCV education program co-design and development processes; and iv) HepPEd resources. A national needs assessment was conducted to analyse the HCV public health literacy of the target audience groups in the prisons (healthcare providers; custodial officers; people in prison) to inform development of a prison-specific HCV education program (HepPEd). Structured interviews were conducted with key informants (n = 40). Three National Steering Committees, one for each target group, were convened to co-design and develop HepPEd. Only healthcare providers involved with hepatitis care were considered to have 'good' to 'very good' HCV health literacy (including knowledge, attitudes, and capabilities), with all other groups considered less favourably. Key barriers identified included being time poor (healthcare providers), poor motivation (custodial officers) and stigma (people in prison). Peer education delivery was considered a key facilitator for custodial officers and people in prison. A suite of multi-modal resources addressing the perceived gaps in HCV health literacy was developed, with a broad theme of 'Let's talk about hep C'. Delivery of HepPEd was designed to overcome key barriers and utilise facilitators for each group. Significant gaps in HCV health literacy were perceived amongst the target audience groups. The comprehensive co-design and development processes utilised in HepPEd suggest the program will be well-placed to improve the HCV public health literacy of the prison sector and thereby enhance HCV testing and treatment rates amongst people in prison. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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27. Designing drunkenness: How pubs, bars and nightclubs increase alcohol sales.
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Tutenges, Sébastien and Bøhling, Frederik
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ALCOHOLISM , *NIGHTCLUBS , *ALCOHOLIC beverage sales & prices , *CAPITALISM , *HAPPY hours - Abstract
Using ethnographic data, this paper investigates the techniques used inside pubs, bars and nightclubs to solicit and sustain alcohol consumption among patrons. Focus is on venues with the majority of patrons belonging to the age group of approximately 15-35 years. The paper identifies a number of techniques, both overt and covert, including: alcohol advertising; special offers (e.g. 'Happy Hours' and 'all you can drink' specials); bartenders' use of strategic intimacy, flirtation, and encouragements to buy more; speed drinking devices (e.g. shot glasses, 'beer bongs' and large pitchers); and architectural features that hamper moderate drinking while accelerating the purchase and intake of alcohol. These techniques were used most extensively in low-priced venues with the youngest patrons (e.g. themed chain pubs) and less so in more expensive venues with more adult patrons (e.g. craft beer bars). The paper argues that youth-oriented drinking venues may be conceived as staged atmospheres of consumption where individuals are seduced and compelled into purchasing alcohol. A team of 12 researchers collected the data through interviews and observations in pubs, bars and nightclubs in four cities across Denmark. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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28. Attitudes towards people living with HIV and people who inject drugs: A mixed method study of stigmas within harm reduction programs in Kazakhstan.
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Stringer, Kristi Lynn, Mukherjee, Trena, McCrimmon, Tara, Terlikbayeva, Assel, Primbetovac, Sholpan, Darisheva, Meruyert, Hunt, Timothy, Gilbert, Louisa, and El-Bassel, Nabila
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HIV-positive persons , *INJECTIONS , *MEDICAL care use , *HARM reduction , *SOCIAL norms - Abstract
Background: High levels of stigma towards people who inject drugs (PWID) and people living with HIV (PLWH) exist in Kazakhstan, yet little is known about the role of stigma in harm reduction service settings. In this paper, we use a mixed method design to explore and describe the actionable drivers and facilitators of stigma among harm reduction service providers. Additionally, we describe the manifestations of stigma among PWID who are living with HIV (PWID/LWH), and the impact that stigma has on harm reduction and healthcare service utilization.Methods: Eight focus groups with 57 PWID/LWH were convened between March 2016 and July 2016 to describe manifestations of stigma from the perspective of syringe exchange program (SEP) clients. Additionally, we surveyed 80 nurses, social workers, outreach workers, and providers of HIV care at SEPs between January 2017 and July 2017 to assess stigmatizing attitudes among staff within the SEP environment. Joint displays were used to integrate quantitative and qualitative data.Results: The actionable drivers of stigma identified in this study include negative opinions and moral judgements towards PWID/LWH. Facilitators identified included stigmatization as a social norm within the service provision environment, a lack of awareness of anti-discrimination policies, and lack of enforcement of anti-discrimination policies. Qualitative findings highlight manifestations of stigma in which PWID/LWH experienced denial of services, perceived negative attitudes, and avoidance from service provision staff. PWID/LWH also described segregation in healthcare settings, the use of unnecessary precautions by providers, and unauthorized disclosure of HIV status.Conclusions: This paper highlights the urgent need to address stigma in the harm reduction and HIV service settings in Kazakhstan. These findings have implications for informing an actionable model for stigma reduction for providers who deliver services to PWID/LWH in Kazakhstan. Drivers, facilitators, and manifestations of stigma are multifaceted and addressing them will require a multilevel approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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29. Priorities and recommended actions for how researchers, practitioners, policy makers, and the affected community can work together to improve access to hepatitis C care for people who use drugs.
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Day, Emma, Broder, Tina, Bruneau, Julie, Cruse, Sally, Dickie, Melisa, Fish, Suzanne, Grillon, Celine, Luhmann, Niklas, Mason, Kate, McLean, Elizabeth, Trooskin, Stacey, Treloar, Carla, and Grebely, Jason
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HEPATITIS C , *OPIOIDS , *SEXUAL health , *HARM reduction , *HEALTH equity - Abstract
It is estimated that 6.1 million people with recent injecting drug use (PWID) are living with hepatitis C virus (HCV). Although HCV-related morbidity and mortality among PWID continues to increase, the advent of direct acting antiviral (DAA) HCV regimens with cure rates >95% provides an opportunity to reverse the rising burden of disease. Additionally, given evidence that opioid substitution therapy and high-coverage needle and syringe programs can reduce HCV incidence by up to 80%, there is an opportunity to reduce HCV transmission with increased coverage of harm reduction services. However, there are significant patient, provider, health system, structural, and societal barriers that impede access to HCV prevention and care for PWID. The International Network on Hepatitis in Substance Users (INHSU), in collaboration with the Australasian Society for HIV, Viral Hepatitis, Sexual Health Medicine (ASHM), Harm Reduction International, the Canadian Network on Hepatitis C, Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse, the National Viral Hepatitis Roundtable, Médecins du Monde and CATIE, held a roundtable discussion prior to the Harm Reduction Conference in Montreal, Canada on 13th May 2017 to discuss how to improve HCV prevention and care for PWID. Over 100 international researchers, practitioners, policy makers, advocates, and affected community members came together to discuss shared priorities for action, develop actionable next steps and to create partnerships to enable application of priorities. This paper highlights the key priority areas identified by participants including: enhancing global coverage of harm reduction services; addressing punitive drug policies; ensuring access to affordable HCV diagnostics and treatment; improving the evidence-base for HCV prevention, testing, linkage to care and treatment; implementing integrated HCV programs; advancing peer-based models of HCV care; and tackling social determinants of health inequalities for PWID. This paper also highlights the recommended actions for each priority identified by the participants from this roundtable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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30. The implementation of overdose prevention sites as a novel and nimble response during an illegal drug overdose public health emergency.
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Wallace, Bruce, Pagan, Flora, and Pauly, Bernadette (Bernie)
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DRUG overdose , *PUBLIC health , *HARM reduction , *DRUG utilization , *LEGISLATION - Abstract
Background: Drug-related overdoses were declared a public health emergency in British Columbia, Canada in April, 2016 facilitating the scale-up of responses including rapid sanctioning and implementation of overdose prevention sites (OPSs). OPSs are a health service providing supervised injection and immediate overdose response. In BC, OPSs were operational within weeks of sanctioning. In the first year of operation over 20 OPSs were established with approximately 550,000 visits and no overdose deaths at any site. In this paper, we examine the implementation of OPSs as a novel and nimble response to prevent overdose deaths as a result of injection drug use.Methods: A multiple case study design was used with the Consolidated Framework for Implementation (CFIR) informing the analysis. Three sites in a single city were included with each site constituting a case. In this paper, we focus on qualitative interviews with 15 staff and their perceptions of the implementation of the OPSs as well as provincial and local documents.Results: The legislative process to implement OPSs was unprecedented as it sanctioned supervised injection services as an extraordinary measure under a declared public health emergency. Innovative and inclusionary practices were possible within state-sanctioned OPSs, as the sites were government-directed yet community-developed, with PWUD centred in service design, implementation and delivery. OPSs lack permanency and may be limited to the duration of the public health emergency.Conclusion: The rapid implementation of OPSs provides an international example of an alternative to lengthy and often onerous sanctioning processes for supervised consumption services (SCSs). Overdose prevention sites provide an example of a novel service design and nimble implementation process that combines the benefits of state-sanctioned injection services with community-driven implementation. Such evidence questions the continued acceptability of governments' restrictive sanctioning processes, which have limited expansion of SCSs internationally and the implementation of services that are not necessarily aligned with the needs of PWUD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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31. Aboriginal alcohol policy and practice in Australia: A case study of unintended consequences.
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d'Abbs, Peter, Burlayn, and Jamijin
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POLICY sciences , *ALCOHOL , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *SOCIOECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines attempts by members of a remote Aboriginal community in the Northern Territory (NT), Australia, to control alcohol use, and the impact of policy decisions taken by national, territory and local governments on those attempts between 2007 and 2017. The Australian Government's main policy instrument for reducing alcohol-related harms from 2010 was the Alcohol Management Plan (AMP), officially defined as a plan, negotiated at a local community level with a high level of community input, for the effective management of alcohol use by the local community. The paper shows that the policy as implemented had the unintended consequence of undermining rather than enhancing the capacity of the community to act collectively in managing alcohol, largely as a result of the interactions of four sets of factors: (1) the policies as formulated; (2) actions taken to implement the policies, (3) the responses of those affected by the policies, and (4) the socio-ecological context in which these events occurred. The paper seeks to identify the processes through which these consequences were generated, and the implications for future policy-making, policy implementation and community-level initiatives for managing alcohol in Aboriginal communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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32. Why are young people drinking less than earlier? Identifying and specifying social mechanisms with a pragmatist approach.
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Törrönen, Jukka, Roumeliotis, Filip, Samuelsson, Eva, Kraus, Ludwig, and Room, Robin
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PRAGMATISM , *ALCOHOL drinking , *SOCIAL media , *LIFESTYLES , *INTERVENTION (Social services) - Abstract
Recent surveys have found a strong decrease in alcohol consumption among young people and this trend has been identified in European countries, Australia and North America. Previous research suggests that the decline in alcohol consumption may be explained by changes in parenting style, increased use of social media, changes in gender identities or a health and fitness trend. We use qualitative interviews with drinking and non-drinking young people from Sweden (N = 49) to explore in what way and in what kinds of contexts these explanations may hold true and how they alone or together may explain declining alcohol consumption among young people. By using the pragmatist approach, we pay attention to what kinds of concerns, habits, practices, situations and meanings our interviewees relate to adolescents' low alcohol consumption or decline in drinking. By analyzing these matters, we aim to specify the social mechanisms that have reduced adolescents' drinking. Our paper discovers social mechanisms similar to previous studies but also a few that have previously been overlooked. We propose that the cultural position of drinking may have changed among young people so that drinking has lost its unquestioned symbolic power as a rite of passage into adulthood. There is less peer pressure to drink and more room for competing activities. This opening of a homogeneous drinking culture to the acceptance of differences may function as a social mechanism that increases the success of other social mechanisms to reduce adolescents' drinking. Furthermore, the results of the paper suggest a hypothesis of the early maturation of young people as more individualized, responsible, reflective, and adult-like actors than in earlier generations. Overall, the paper provides hypotheses for future quantitative studies to examine the prevalence and distribution of the identified social mechanisms, as well as recommends directions for developing effective interventions to support young people's healthy lifestyle choices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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33. Individual, social, and structural factors affecting antiretroviral therapy adherence among HIV-positive people who inject drugs in Kazakhstan.
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Davis, Alissa, McCrimmon, Tara, Dasgupta, Anindita, Gilbert, Louisa, Terlikbayeva, Assel, Hunt, Timothy, Primbetova, Sholpan, Wu, Elwin, Darisheva, Meruyert, and El-Bassel, Nabila
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HIGHLY active antiretroviral therapy , *HIV-positive men , *PATIENT compliance , *SOCIAL factors - Abstract
Background: HIV-infected people who inject drugs (PWID) are particularly vulnerable to suboptimal ART adherence. The fastest-growing HIV epidemics globally are driven by injection drug use, but only a small percentage of HIV-positive PWID have achieved viral suppression. Virally suppressed individuals have better HIV-related health outcomes and effectively no risk of transmitting HIV to others. Hence, ART adherence is important for both HIV treatment and HIV prevention. There is a paucity of data on barriers and facilitators of ART adherence among PWID in low and middle income countries, which is problematic given the growing HIV epidemics among PWID in these countries.Methods: Using the Theory of Triadic Influence, this paper examines individual, interpersonal, and structural barriers and facilitators of ART adherence among HIV-positive PWID in four cities in Kazakhstan. Eight focus groups were conducted (two in each city) with a total of 57 participants. Data were coded and analyzed by three researchers.Results: We found a number of barriers and facilitators to ART adherence among PWID at the individual, interpersonal, and structural levels. Individual barriers to ART adherence include misperceptions about ART, forgetfulness due to the effects of illicit drug use, and medication side effects. Interpersonal facilitators of ART adherence include social support and good relationships with healthcare providers. Structural barriers include poverty, legal challenges, disruptions in the ART supply, and stigma and discrimination.Conclusion: The paper highlights important factors related to ART adherence for HIV-positive PWID and identifies potential strategies for intervention efforts, including couple-based interventions, electronic reminders, linkage to drug treatment services, and patient navigation. Effectively enhancing adherence to ART among PWID will likely require multi-level approaches and strategies. Further research should be conducted on potential methods and interventions for improving ART adherence among this vulnerable population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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34. A mapping review of evaluations of alcohol policy restrictions targeting alcohol-related harm in night-time entertainment precincts.
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Taylor, Nicholas, Miller, Peter, Coomber, Kerri, Mayshak, Richelle, Zahnow, Renee, Patafio, Brittany, Burn, Michele, and Ferris, Jason
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ALCOHOL-induced disorders , *ALCOHOL , *PEOPLE with alcoholism , *VIOLENCE , *PROPORTIONAL representation - Abstract
Background: Alcohol-related harm in night-time entertainment precincts (NEPs) is disproportionately high for the amount of alcohol consumed within these areas. Previous evaluations of alcohol restrictions targeting NEPs have often looked at restrictions in isolation and not attempted to create a comprehensive theoretical explanation that takes multiple restrictions into account. The aim of this review is to establish which restrictions have been adequately evaluated in previous literature, and to identify any research which may provide the basis for a theoretical model that explains the interactions between different alcohol restrictions in NEPs and their combined impact on alcohol-related-harm.Methods: A mapping review was conducted to plot evaluations of the effectiveness of different alcohol restrictions in NEPs at reducing assault and injury rates (protocol PROSPERO 2017: CRD42017069773). Six databases and 145 websites were searched, results were categorised based on the type of restrictions evaluated: Outlet density, trading hours, lockouts, price, patron bans, and drinks restrictions.Results: Forty-eight articles were identified out of 20,743 returned by the systematic search. Thirty-five of these papers were original works, and 13 reviews. Outlet density was examined in 15 of the papers, trading hours in 30, lockouts in 21, price in 2, patron bans in 7 and drinks restrictions in 15.Conclusion: No pre-existing theoretical models were identified. Outlet density, trading hours, and price restrictions all had evidence that suggested high levels of effectiveness in NEPs and would be suitable for inclusion in a theoretical model. More research is required before attempting to include lockouts, patron bans and drinks restrictions in a theoretical model. Future research should focus on establishing a theoretical model based on evidence of effective alcohol restrictions and gathering an evidence base for under-researched restrictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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35. Drug detection dogs at Australian outdoor music festivals: Deterrent, detection and iatrogenic effects.
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Grigg, Jodie, Barratt, Monica J., and Lenton, Simon
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DRUG abuse , *IATROGENIC diseases , *MUSIC festivals , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Recent drug-related deaths at Australian music festivals have led to increasing concern about the risk of future harm, but contention about how to effectively respond. One hotly debated strategy has been the use of drug detection dogs which currently operate at festivals across Australia, despite claims they are ineffective and contribute to risky drug use practices. This paper aims to investigate responses to the expected presence, and sightings, of drug dogs at the last festival attended.Methods: An anonymous online survey was completed by almost 2000 Australian festival-goers. The largest subsample used in the analyses for this paper (n= 647) was 59% male and had a median age of 20 (IQR = 18-22).Results: Of those who expected dogs to be present at their last festival (n= 647), only 4% reported that this threat led them to decide not to take drugs. Other responses included: concealing their drugs well (48%), getting someone else to carry their drugs (15%), buying their drugs inside (11%), taking less easily detected drugs (10%) and taking drugs before entering (7%). Of those who carried drugs in (n= 418), 10% concealed them internally and 1% swallowed them to retrieve inside. Of those who had drugs on their person when seeing a dog (n= 189), 10% reported consuming drugs in response. No respondents reported being detected with drugs due to a positive identification.Conclusion: Almost all festival-goers surveyed did not report being deterred from drug usage by the expected presence of drug dogs. Instead, a variety of alternative responses to avoid detection were reported, many of which could place festival-goers at greater risk of experiencing drug-related harms. In the face of mounting evidence of both ineffectiveness and iatrogenic effects, the use of drug detection dogs at Australian music festivals should be urgently reconsidered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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36. (Mis)understanding the intersection between development policies and data collection: Experiences in Afghanistan.
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Mansfield, David
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OPIUM poppy growers , *DRUG abuse prevention , *PREVENTION of drugs & crime , *ECONOMIC development , *COCAINE - Abstract
There is a misalignment between a development community focused on improving the welfare of vulnerable populations and the challenges of addressing widespread illicit drug crop production in drug producing countries. Drawing on the example of Afghanistan, this paper argues that the reasons for the development communities failure to engage is in large part a function of the way that illicit opium poppy and the illicit economy is currently perceived and understood by policy makers, practitioners and scholars. Much of the problem lies with the various statistics used to describe and quantify opium production in Afghanistan, many of them produced by UNODC and cited repeatedly in media coverage and the academic literature. These statistics shape how we have come to understand the scale and nature of the drugs problem, and thereby have informed policy responses. This paper argues that it is critical that policy makers and scholars fully understand the veracity of drug related statistics, including their methodological and conceptual limitations, before using them as the foundations for development programmes or policy responses. Indeed, this paper argues that many of these statistics have presented a simplified and 'profit maximising' model of the factors influencing farmers' livelihoods choices, which has proven deeply misleading and further alienated the development community from engaging constructively with the challenges of illicit drug production in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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37. Opioid-related mortality in rural America: Geographic heterogeneity and intervention strategies.
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Rigg, Khary K., Monnat, Shannon M., and Chavez, Melody N.
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OPIOID abuse , *MORTALITY , *EPIDEMICS , *RURAL health , *DRUG control - Abstract
Over the last two decades, opioid-related mortality rates have increased dramatically to become a serious public health concern in the United States. Opioid-related mortality has reached epidemic levels in certain rural areas of the U.S., such as Appalachia, New England, and the Mountain West, while remaining relatively low in others, such as the Delta South and Great Plains. Explanations for geographic variation in opioid mortality are unclear, contributing to ineffective policies and interventions. The goal of this article is to summarize the existing literature on the opioid epidemic in the rural U.S. to help guide intervention efforts. This paper 1) describes geographic heterogeneity in opioid-related mortality, with a focus on rural areas, 2) summarizes factors that likely contribute to this heterogeneity, and 3) discusses potential strategies for addressing the opioid epidemic in the hardest-hit rural communities. The information presented in this paper dispels the myth that the opioid epidemic is disproportionately rural, and demonstrates that the magnitude of the epidemic has varied considerably across different rural areas. This paper provides important insights for public health professionals, treatment practitioners, researchers, and policymakers as they work toward solutions that take into account the diversity of rural communities and the dynamic nature of the opioid epidemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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38. An analysis of Belgian Cannabis Social Clubs' supply practices: A shapeshifting model?
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Pardal, Mafalda
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- *
MARIJUANA abuse , *MARIJUANA growing , *SOCIAL clubs , *PHARMACEUTICAL policy - Abstract
Background and Research Questions: Cannabis Social Clubs (CSCs) are associations of cannabis users that collectively organize the cultivation and distribution of cannabis. As this middle ground supply model has been active in Belgium for over a decade, this paper aims to examine CSCs' supply practices, noting any shifts from previously reported features of the model.Methods: We draw on interviews with directors of seven currently active Belgian CSCs (n = 21) and their cannabis growers (n = 23). This data was complemented by additional fieldwork, as well as a review of CSCs' key internal documents.Results: Most Belgian CSCs are formally registered non-profit associations. One of the Belgian CSCs has developed a structure of sub-divisions and regional chapters. The Belgian CSCs supply cannabis to members only, and in some cases only medical users are admitted. CSCs rely on in-house growers, ensuring supply in a cooperative and closed-circuit way, despite changes to the distribution methods The associations are relatively small-scale and non-commercially driven. The introduction of formal quality control practices remains challenging.Discussion: As the CSC model is often included in discussions about cannabis policy, but remains in most cases driven by self-regulatory efforts, it is important to take stock of how CSCs' supply function has been implemented in practice - as doing so will improve our understanding of the model and of the wider range of cannabis 'supply architectures'. This paper highlights the continuity and changes in CSC practices, noting the emergence of several different variants of the CSC model, which are classified in a first CSC typology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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39. "The difference is in the tomato at the end": Understanding the motivations and practices of cannabis growers operating within Belgian Cannabis Social Clubs.
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Pardal, Mafalda
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CANNABIS (Genus) , *SOCIAL clubs , *INDUSTRIAL costs , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry , *MEDICAL protocols , *DRUGS of abuse laws , *DRUG laws , *AGRICULTURAL economics , *AGRICULTURAL laws , *SMOKING laws , *DRUG control , *RESEARCH , *NONPROFIT organizations , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *AGRICULTURE , *RESEARCH methodology , *COOPERATIVENESS , *EVALUATION research , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SMOKING - Abstract
Background: In Belgium, Cannabis Social Clubs (CSCs) collectively organize the cultivation and distribution of cannabis for the personal use of their members. In this paper we seek to improve understanding of the motivations and practices of cannabis growers operating within CSCs, shedding light on the cultivation process.Methods: We draw on data gathered through face-to-face semi-structured interviews with the directors of seven active Belgian CSCs (n = 21) and CSC growers (n = 23). These data are complemented by additional fieldwork and a review of policies relating to CSCs', including bylaws and growing protocols.Findings: The Belgian CSCs rely on single and multiple in-house grower arrangements. Most CSC growers had been cultivating cannabis prior to joining their current CSC, albeit growing in different contexts (non-commercial and commercial). The CSC growers discussed both ideological and pragmatic motives for operating within a CSC. Cultivation took place indoors and followed organic practices. Despite their small-scale (20 plants on average), the grow sites used specialized equipment. The growers reported receiving financial compensation to cover production costs.Conclusion: This paper offers new insights into a particular sector of domestic cannabis cultivation - CSC growers and their practices within those collectives - which has not been studied previously. The Belgian CSCs have decentralized production among small-scale grow sites, at a size comparable to that found in other small-scale cultivation studies. In terms of motivations and practices, CSC growers share some features typically ascribed to small-scale cannabis cultivators. At the same time, CSC growers seemed particularly engaged with the CSC model and willing to adhere to the (self-)regulated practices developed by the organizations. This had implications for the way cultivation was organized and for the role of the grower within the CSC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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40. Drug affordability-potential tool for comparing illicit drug markets.
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Groshkova, Teodora, Cunningham, Andrew, Royuela, Luis, Singleton, Nicola, Saggers, Tony, and Sedefov, Roumen
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DRUG traffic , *DRUG prices , *DRUG monitoring , *PHARMACEUTICAL industry , *HEROIN - Abstract
Background: The importance of illicit drug price data and making appropriate adjustments for purity has been repeatedly highlighted for understanding illicit drug markets. The European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) has been collecting retail price data for a number of drug types alongside drug-specific purity information for over 15 years. While these data are useful for a number of monitoring and analytical purposes, they are not without their limitations and there are circumstances where additional adjustment needs to be considered. This paper reviews some conceptual issues and measurement challenges relevant to the interpretation of price data. It also highlights the issues with between-country comparisons of drug prices and introduces the concept of affordability of drugs, going beyond purity-adjustment to account for varying national economies.Methods: Based on a 2015 European data set of price and purity data across the heroin and cocaine retail markets, the paper demonstrates a new model for drug market comparative analysis; calculation of drug affordability is achieved by applying to purity-adjusted prices 2015 Price Level Indices (PLI, Eurostat).Results: Available data allowed retail heroin and cocaine market comparison for 27 European countries. The lowest and highest unadjusted prices per gram were observed for heroin: in Estonia, Belgium, Greece and Bulgaria (lowest) and Finland, Ireland, Sweden and Latvia (highest); for cocaine: the Netherlands, Belgium and the United Kingdom (lowest) and Turkey, Finland, Estonia and Romania (highest). The affordability per gram of heroin and cocaine when taking into account adjustment for both purity and economy demonstrates different patterns.Conclusion: It is argued that purity-adjusted price alone provides an incomplete comparison of retail price across countries. The proposed new method takes account of the differing economic conditions within European countries, thus providing a more sophisticated tool for cross-national comparisons of retail drug markets in Europe. Future work will need to examine other potential uses of the drug affordability tool.Limitations: The limitations of this measure reflect primarily the limitations of the constituent data; in addition to issues inherent in collecting accurate data on illicit markets, analysis that relies on data collected from multiple countries is susceptible to discrepancies in data collection practices from country to country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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41. Ice parties among young men who have sex with men in Thailand: Pleasures, secrecy and risks.
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Guadamuz, Thomas E. and Boonmongkon, Pimpawun
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MEN who have sex with men , *METHAMPHETAMINE , *ETHNOLOGY , *ANAL sex , *PUBLIC health , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FOCUS groups , *INTERNET , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL ethics , *PLEASURE , *PRIVACY , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *RISK-taking behavior , *SELF medication , *EVALUATION research , *CENTRAL nervous system stimulants - Abstract
Background: Crystal methamphetamine (ice) has become the substance of choice among young men who have sex with men (YMSM) in urban Thailand. Yet, there is scarce data on this phenomenon, partly due to the difficulty in accessing men who will disclose and openly discuss the social contexts, meanings and risks surrounding ice practice. We present an ethnography of ice parties, critically discussing the in-depth social meanings of ice; the sexual socialities and the secrecy surrounding its use; the transactions between older and younger men; and the role of the Internet and mobile technology.Methods: Forty repeated narrative interviews (life stories), ten focus group discussions, as well as systematic online and offline observations were conducted over a three-year period. Purposive sampling was used to recruit study participants in a variety of online and offline spaces and through working closely with local Thai community-based organizations serving MSM. To be eligible, participants had to be between 18 and 29 years, able to converse in Thai, had used ice, and had anal sex with another man in the past 6 months. We also strived for sample variability with respects to socio-demographic characteristics (e.g., age, educational attainment and living situation). Data analysis was conducted in Thai by two researchers using the constant comparative method based on grounded theory.Results: On surface, participants described ice parties as exclusive, in trend, luxurious, fun and pleasurable-a kind of modern camaraderie among beautiful men. In reality, however, this group phenomenon was a social hierarchy containing several important players with relational power to one another, to the ice itself and to the physical space where ice was being consumed. These players included ice suppliers, party hosts, party guests and "icetenders." The paper also discusses the sociality of secrecy that surrounds ice parties as well as the power relations between older relatively rich men who provide ice and the younger men who crave for the chemical, pointing to the risks associated with engagement at ice parties, including instances of rape, violence and unsafe sex. For some participants, ice use was part of their "everyday life," or even believed to be a "rites of passage." For others, it involved sexual silence in cases where they were forced to have (unprotected) sex with certain persons or engage in high-risk activities against their will.Conclusions: Ice parties, where high-risk practices were common, power and agency quickly became relational and negotiable. This paper illuminated the secret sociality of ice so that public health efforts will be better equipped with understanding and reaching out to young men who may be at heightened risk for HIV, STI, violence and other health concerns. Ice parties can, for example, be seen as opportunities for harm-reduction strategies whereby young men are not judged for the activities they engage, but are instead respected and approached in a contextualized, non-judgmental way. Finally, icetenders and party hosts may be individuals where public health practitioners can target and include in the development of novel harm-reduction programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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42. Becoming enwinded: A new materialist take on smoking pleasure.
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Dennis, Simone
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SMOKING & psychology , *PLEASURE , *MATERIALISM , *CIGARETTE smokers , *PHARMACEUTICAL policy , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *AIR - Abstract
What might new materialist perspectives bring to our understanding of smoking pleasure? In this paper, I draw on this thinking to sketch out an alternative, non-unitary smoker who is at the mercy of the whims of the breeze - a yielding I will argue is key to smoking pleasure. With these intentions in mind, rather than thinking of what the biotechnology of cigarettes accomplishes in terms of the chemical delivery of pleasure, or adding to the multiply of social and cultural reasons anthropologists have tendered to account for it, I approach smoking pleasure in and through the medium of the smoky air. This approach permits examination of how nonhuman and human agents, like cigarettes, lungs, hands and other things form momentary and contingent relation in the air, as well as the role of the air itself in 'enwinding' the smoker. When smoking pleasure is explored from such a perspective, the smoker can be recast as part of a complex of relations that she does not fully control, rather than the agentic centre or principal arrayer of the nonhuman world. The pleasures of smoking, and the smoker herself, I argue, are emergent and come into being precisely in these relations: 'the smoker' originates, terminates, and is defined in and with elements, rather than being surely and certainly attached to a particular smoker subjectivity. Chief among the complex of things and elements that make the smoker and her pleasure is the air itself - and it is the air itself that is my primary informant in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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43. Nine reasons why ecstasy is not quite what it used to be.
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Mounteney, Jane, Griffiths, Paul, Bo, Alessandra, Cunningham, Andrew, Matias, Joao, and Pirona, Alessandro
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ECSTASY (Drug) , *DRUG supply & demand , *ONLINE marketplaces , *DRUG accessibility , *PSYCHIATRIC drugs , *SUBSTANCE abuse prevention , *HALLUCINOGENIC drugs , *SOCIAL marketing , *DRUG control , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *PHARMACODYNAMICS , *ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper explores the recent resurgence in use of ecstasy/MDMA in Europe and highlights keys areas of continuity and divergence between the ecstasy market of the 1990s and the current MDMA market. Based on a scoping study involving a targeted multi-source data collection exercise on MDMA, it highlights nine areas that have undergone some level of change, linked with both supply and demand for the drug. Factors discussed include: innovation in production techniques; changes in precursor chemical availability; the role of online markets; competition with other stimulants and new psychoactive substances; the increased availability of high-strength MDMA; and the shift from subcultural towards more mainstream use of the drug. The paper proposes that the MDMA on Europe's contemporary market is in some respects a third generation product with a different consumer profile, with implications that responses developed at the time of the drug's earlier iteration, may be in need of a review and revamp. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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44. How have cannabis use and related indicators changed since legalization of cannabis for non-medical purposes? Results of the Canadian Cannabis Survey 2018–2022.
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Goodman, Samantha, Dann, Matthew J., Fataar, Fathima, and Abramovici, Hanan
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SMOKING , *ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *PUBLIC opinion , *INTERNET , *SURVEYS , *ODDS ratio , *FLOWERS , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *DRUG laws , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *HEALTH education , *DRUGS of abuse - Abstract
• First trends analysis of data from the national Canadian Cannabis Survey. • Past-year cannabis use increased since non-medical cannabis legalization in Canada. • The proportion of past-year consumers using cannabis frequently is unchanged. • Past-year use of edibles, drinks and vape pens/cartridges has increased. • Legal purchasing is displacing the illicit cannabis market in Canada. Cannabis use for non-medical purposes was legalized and regulated in Canada through the Cannabis Act in October 2018. This paper examined trends in use of cannabis for non-medical purposes and related indicators from pre- to post-legalization in Canada (2018–2022). Data from 5 years of the Canadian Cannabis Survey, an annual web-based survey administered to Canadians 16 years of age or older, were used in the analysis (n 2018 =12,952; n 2019 =11,922; n 2020 =10,821; n 2021 =10,733; n 2022 =10,048). Cannabis measures include questions about use, types of products, sources, risk perceptions and beliefs, and exposure to public education campaigns and health warnings. Adjusted logistic regression models tested differences in outcomes over time. Past 12-month cannabis consumption increased among Canadians from 22 % in 2018 to 27 % in 2022 (AOR=1.41;99 % CI:1.28–1.54). Similarly, daily/almost daily (DAD) consumption increased from 5 % in 2018 to 7 % in 2022 (AOR=1.36;99 % CI:1.16–1.59). Consumption of dried flower, hash/kief, and concentrates/extracts (e.g., wax, shatter, budder) decreased since 2018, whereas consumption of edibles, beverages and vape pens/cartridges increased (p < 0.001). Legal purchasing increased from 4 % in 2018 to 69 % in 2022, while accessing cannabis through social and illegal sources decreased over time (p < 0.001). More Canadians are reporting cannabis consumption since legalization and regulation of cannabis for non-medical purposes, continuing a pre-existing trend despite an increase in awareness of the risks of consuming cannabis. Trends in product use indicate a transition from dried flower and concentrates/extracts towards consumption of cannabis foods, drinks and vape pens/cartridges. The legal market is increasingly displacing the illicit cannabis market in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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45. The Coloniality of drug prohibition.
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Dertadian, George Christopher
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DRUG laws , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *HEALTH literacy , *SCHOLARLY method , *VIOLENCE , *DECOLONIZATION , *DRUGS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability - Abstract
There have been several recent commentaries which have highlighted the relevance of the postcolonial perspective to drug prohibition and called for the decolonisation of drug policy (Daniels et al., 2021 ; Hillier, Winkler & Lavallée, 2020 ; Lasco, 2022 ; Mills, 2019). While these are significant interventions in the field, sparse drugs scholarship has engaged more directly with well-developed literature and concepts from Critical Indigenous Studies (Moreton-Robinson, 2016) and Indigenous Standpoint Theory (Moreton-Robinson, 2013 ; Nakata, 2007) and reflected on its applicability to the drug and alcohol field. In contrast to the postcolonial perspective, which understands colonisation as a historical event with contemporary impacts, Indigenous scholarship conceptualises colonisation as an active and ongoing part of how the settler-state continues to impose itself. From this vantage point I explore coloniality as a system of power and reflect on the way prohibition acts as a key arm of the settler-colonial state. The paper explores the way concepts like vulnerability, marginality, overrepresentation, disproportionality and addiction involve colonial violence, knowledge practices and narratives which are central to the way coloniality is maintained and continues to assert itself in contemporary settler societies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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46. Responding to 'wicked problems': policy and governance on drug-related deaths in English and Welsh prisons, 2015-2021.
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Duke, Karen and MacGregor, Susanne
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CORRECTIONAL institutions -- Law & legislation , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *DRUG overdose , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CONTROL (Psychology) , *MENTAL illness , *PROBLEM solving , *THEMATIC analysis , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
Prison settings have been neglected in the growing literature on drug-related deaths. This paper explores policy and practice issues regarding the governance of drug-related deaths in prisons in England and Wales from 2015-2021. Thematic documentary analysis was conducted on national level policy documents published between 2015-2021 (e.g. drug strategies, prison policy documents, Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Prisons and Prison and Probation Ombudsman (PPO) annual reports and guidance for staff). At the local (prison) level, all of the PPO fatal investigation reports and their associated action plans relating to 171 drug-related deaths from 2015-2021 were analysed thematically. Various modes of governance were identified using Head's 'wicked problems' conceptual framework including avoidance and denial, coercive controls, compartmentalised micro-management, incremental and pragmatic adjustment and technocratic problem-solving. There was strong evidence of the dominance of denial of the problem of drug-related deaths, coercive controls, micro-management and reliance on technological solutions in the early years (2015-2018). In some prisons, there developed a move towards the adoption of more pragmatic and incremental policies and push towards comprehensive policies over time. In others, remnants of denial and coercion remained. In our analysis, the focus on new psychoactive substances came to dominate attention, to the relative neglect of other substances and of the contribution of mental and physical illness to these deaths. Staff are not equipped, supported or resourced adequately to deal with the two 'wicked problems' of increasing rates of drug use and mental illness which collide in the prison setting. The PPO investigations repeatedly recommend reducing supply and improving monitoring and surveillance and the emergency response. There is less focus on prevention and reducing demand or improving the wider environmental context and culture in which the deaths occur. Policy needs to pay more attention to the fundamental issues driving the current deterioration in conditions in prisons. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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47. 'Enjoying the kick': Locating pleasure within the drug consumption room.
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Duncan, Tristan, Duff, Cameron, Sebar, Bernadette, and Lee, Jessica
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HARM reduction , *DRUG abuse , *ALCOHOLISM , *ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis , *POSTHUMANISM , *DRUG utilization , *SUBSTANCE abuse & psychology , *AFFECT (Psychology) , *ETHNOLOGY , *HUMANISM , *PLEASURE , *SOCIAL context - Abstract
Background: Harm reduction policy and praxis has long struggled to accommodate the pleasures of alcohol and other drug use. Whilst scholars have consistently highlighted this struggle, how pleasure might come to practically inform the design and delivery of harm reduction policies and programs remains less clear. The present paper seeks to move beyond conceptual critiques of harm reduction's 'pleasure oversight' to more focused empirical analysis of how flows of pleasure emerge, circulate and, importantly, may be reoriented in the course of harm reduction practice.Methods: We ground our analysis in the context of detailed ethnographic research in a drug consumption room in Frankfurt, Germany. Drawing on recent strands of post-humanist thought, the paper deploys the concept of the 'consumption event' to uncover the manner in which these facilities mediate the practice and embodied experience of drug use and incite or limit bodily potentials for intoxication and pleasure.Results: Through the analysis, we mapped a diversity of pleasures as they emerged and circulated through events of consumption at the consumption room. Beyond the pleasurable intensities of intoxication's kick, these pleasures were expressed in a range of novel capacities, practices and drug using bodies. In each instance, pleasure could not be reduced to a simple, linear product of drug use. Rather, it arose for our participants through distinctive social and affective transformations enabled through events of consumption at the consumption room and the generative force of actors and associations of which these events were composed.Conclusion: Our research suggests that the drug consumption room serves as a conduit through which its clients can potentially enact more pleasurable, productive and positive relations to both themselves and their drug use. Acknowledging the centrality of pleasure to client engagement with these facilities, the paper concludes by drawing out the implications of these findings for the design and delivery of consumption room services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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48. Psychedelic pleasures: An affective understanding of the joys of tripping.
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Bøhling, Frederik
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HALLUCINOGENIC drugs , *MUSHROOMS , *HARM reduction , *AYAHUASCA , *LITERATURE - Abstract
Background: This paper considers the pleasures of psychedelic drugs and proposes a Deleuzian understanding of drugged pleasures as affects. In spite of a large body of work on psychedelics, not least on their therapeutic potentials, the literature is almost completely devoid of discussions of the recreational practices and pleasures of entheogenic drugs. Yet, most people do not use psychedelics because of their curative powers, but because they are fun and enjoyable ways to alter the experience of reality.Methods: In the analytical part of the paper, I examine 100 trip reports from an internet forum in order to explore the pleasures of tripping.Results: The analyses map out how drugs such as LSD and mushrooms - in combination with contextual factors such as other people, music and nature - give rise to a set of affective modifications of the drug user's capacities to feel, sense and act.Conclusion: In conclusion it is argued that taking seriously the large group of recreational users of hallucinogens is important not only because it broadens our understanding of how entheogenic drugs work in different bodies and settings, but also because it may enable a more productive and harm reductive transmission of knowledge between the scientific and recreational psychedelic communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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49. Propagating the Haze? Community and professional perceptions of cannabis cultivation and the impacts of prohibition.
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Beckett Wilson, Helen, Taylor, Stuart, Barrett, Giles, Jamieson, Janet, and Grindrod, Lauren
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MARIJUANA abuse , *DRUG laws , *CONSCIOUSNESS , *DRUG control , *COMMON misconceptions , *SMOKING laws , *DRUGS of abuse laws , *CANNABIS (Genus) , *DRUGS of abuse - Abstract
Background: Recent decades have seen substantial changes in the UK cannabis landscape, including increased domestic production, the ascendancy of stronger strains (namely 'skunk') and the drug's reclassification under the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act. Resultantly, cannabis retains significance in the consciousness, priorities and policy agendas of communities, drug services and criminal justice agencies.Methods: This paper presents an empirical study, which examined both perceptions and impacts of cannabis cultivation and its control within a North-West English borough. It draws on qualitative research with samples of professionals, practitioners, resident groups, cannabis users, cannabis users' families and cannabis cultivators themselves.Findings: The findings suggest that cannabis cultivation was not a uniformly familiar concept to respondents, who had limited knowledge and experience of its production. Across all participant groups, the transmission of accurate information was lacking, with individuals instead drawing on the reductionist drug discourse (Taylor, 2016) to fill knowledge deficits. Consequently, some participants conflated cannabis cultivation with wider prohibitionist constructions of drug markets, resulting in the diffusion of misinformation and an amplification of anxieties. In contrast, other participants construed cultivation as making economic sense during austerity, justifying such tolerance through inverse adherence to the same narrow socio-cultural construction of drugs i.e. that cultivation carried comparatively less harms than real drug markets. Enforcement mechanisms also drew on generic prohibitionist conceptions, assuming cultivators to be unconstrained, autonomous actors in need of punishment; a belief which lacked nuanced understanding of the local terrain where vulnerable individuals cultivating under duress played a key role in the supply chain.Conclusion: The paper concludes with a call for the provision of accessible information/education; the need to challenge and reconceptualise the assumed autonomy and resultant punity directed at all cannabis cultivators; and a subsequent need to reassess established forms of legal (and increasingly social) enforcement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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50. Managing expense and expectation in a treatment revolution: Problematizing prioritisation through an exploration of hepatitis C treatment 'benefit'.
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Harris, Magdalena
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HEPATITIS C treatment , *ANTIVIRAL agents , *PATIENT psychology , *INTRAVENOUS drug abusers , *MEDICAL decision making , *DISEASES , *THERAPEUTIC use of interferons , *HOPE , *HEPATITIS C , *INTERFERONS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *QUALITATIVE research , *ECONOMICS , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) have transformed the hepatitis C (HCV) treatment landscape. These highly effective drugs are, however, not available to all. In a context of DAA rationing, clinicians are advised to "manage patient expectations" about the benefits of a HCV cure. This directive particularly pertains to people with minimal liver damage and those who have ceased injecting: populations negated in contemporary prioritisation debates.Methods: This paper engages with the assumptions underpinning HCV treatment prioritisation discourses to explore the concept of treatment 'benefit' from patient perspectives. Data are from a qualitative longitudinal study exploring treatment transitions and decision-making from 2012-2015. Participants comprised 28 people living with HCV, ten treatment providers and eight stakeholders, based in London, United Kingdom (UK). One hundred hours of clinic observations were conducted at two HCV treatment hospitals. Thematic analyses pertaining to treatment expectation and outcome inform this paper.Results: Twenty-two participants commenced treatment. The majority who were unable to access DAAs chose to commence interferon-based treatment immediately rather than wait. Participants accounted for treatment urgency in relation to three interrelated narratives of hope and expectation. HCV treatment promised: social reconnection; social redemption and a return to 'normality'. For many with successful treatment outcomes, these benefits appeared to be realised.Conclusion: The DAA era heralds a discursive shift: from 'managing [interferon] risk and difficulty' to 'managing [DAA] expense and expectation'. Calls to 'manage patient expectations' about the benefits of HCV cure are predicated on clinical benefits only, negating the social impacts of living with HCV. The public health priorities commonly articulated in treatment prioritisation debates are not consistent with those of people managing illness in their daily lives. During this 'treatment revolution' there is a need to be cognisant of the multiple publics living with the virus and the treatment needs of those who do not fit population-health scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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