1. Transitioning illicit drug preferences and emerging user identities in Ohio: The proliferation of methamphetamine use among African Americans.
- Author
-
Flynn KC and Hoffer LD
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Amphetamine-Related Disorders ethnology, Drug Users statistics & numerical data, Female, Heroin Dependence epidemiology, Heroin Dependence ethnology, Ill-Housed Persons statistics & numerical data, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Methamphetamine administration & dosage, Middle Aged, Ohio, Poverty statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders ethnology, White People statistics & numerical data, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Amphetamine-Related Disorders epidemiology, Illicit Drugs, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Understanding the social dynamics of local methamphetamine markets is critical to improving community health and reducing social costs associated with illicit drug use. We examine a local drug market in Summit County, Ohio, wherein methamphetamine users ascribe themselves different ethnic identities from those long associated with the drug elsewhere in the United States. Qualitative interviews with 52 study participants demonstrate that very poor and homeless White males and females are now using methamphetamine; however, even more surprising is that 31 of the participants identified themselves as poor or homeless, male or female African, Native, biracial, or multiracial Americans. The drug use trajectory of these 31 participants in particular involved a transition from a historical preference for crack to a present one for methamphetamine and, in some cases, a preference for concurrent use of methamphetamine and heroin. Many of these methamphetamine users also emphasized their ethnic identity to distinguish themselves as nonproducers of methamphetamine in comparison to Whites, who are commonly associated with methamphetamine production. Findings appear to suggest an emergent means of identity management resulting from the ethnic diversity of users in this methamphetamine market. These findings may have relevance in other communities with similar demographics and drug markets and may hold important implications for drug treatment, policy-making, and law enforcement professionals' work associated with methamphetamine users, producers, and distributors.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF