Using digital technology to reduce drug-related harms: a targeted service users' perspective of the Digital Lifelines Scotland programme.

IF 4 2区 社会学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Graeme Strachan, Hadi Daneshvar, Hannah Carver, Jessica Greenhalgh, Catriona Matheson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Deaths due to drug overdose are an international issue, causing an estimated 128,000 global deaths in 2019. Scotland has the highest rate of drug-related deaths in Europe, with those in the most deprived areas at greater risk than those in affluent areas. There is a paucity of research on digital solutions, particularly from the perspective of those who use drugs who additionally access harm reduction and homelessness support services. The Digital Lifelines Scotland programme (DLS) provides vulnerable people who use/d drugs with digital devices to connect with services.

Methods: This paper reports on the evaluation of the DLS from the perspective of service users who accessed services for those at risk of drug-related harms. A mixed methods approach was used including an online-survey (n = 19) and semi-structured interviews (n = 21). Survey data were analysed descriptively and interview data through inductive coding, informed by the Technology, People, Organisations and Macroenvironmental factors (TPOM) framework, to investigate the use, access, and availability of devices, and people's experiences and perceptions of them.

Results: Most participants lived in social/council housing (63.2%, n = 12), many lived alone (68.4%, n = 13). They were mainly over 40 years old and lived in a city. Participants described a desire for data privacy, knowledge, and education, and placed a nascent social and personal value on digital devices. Participants pointed to the person-centred individuality of the service provision as one of the reasons to routinely engage with services. Service users experienced an increased sense of value and there was a palpable sense of community, connection and belonging developed through the programme, including interaction with services and devices.

Conclusions: This paper presents a unique perspective which documents the experiences of service users on the DLS. Participants illustrated a desire for life improvement and a collective and individual feeling of responsibility towards themselves and digital devices. Digital inclusion has the potential to provide avenues by which service users can safely and constructively access services and society to improve outcomes. This paper provides a foundation to further cultivate the insight of service users on digital solutions in this emerging area.

利用数字技术减少与毒品有关的危害:苏格兰数字生命线计划的目标服务用户视角。
背景:吸毒过量导致死亡是一个国际问题,据估计,2019 年全球将有 128,000 人死于吸毒过量。苏格兰是欧洲毒品致死率最高的地区,最贫困地区的人比富裕地区的人面临更大的风险。有关数字化解决方案的研究很少,尤其是从那些同时获得减低危害和无家可归者支持服务的吸毒者的角度来看。苏格兰数字生命线计划(DLS)为吸毒/贩毒的弱势人群提供数字设备,使他们能够获得相关服务:本文从服务使用者的角度出发,报告了对 DLS 的评估情况。本文采用了混合方法,包括在线调查(19 人)和半结构式访谈(21 人)。在技术、人员、组织和宏观环境因素(TPOM)框架的指导下,对调查数据进行了描述性分析,并通过归纳编码对访谈数据进行了分析,以调查设备的使用、获取和可用性,以及人们对设备的体验和看法:大多数参与者居住在社会/市政住房中(63.2%,n = 12),许多人独居(68.4%,n = 13)。他们的年龄主要在 40 岁以上,居住在城市。参与者描述了对数据隐私、知识和教育的渴望,并对数字设备赋予了新的社会和个人价值。参与者指出,以人为本的个性化服务是他们经常参与服务的原因之一。服务使用者体验到了更多的价值感,并通过该计划,包括与服务和设备的互动,产生了明显的社区感、联系感和归属感:本文以独特的视角记录了参加 DLS 的服务使用者的经历。参与者表达了对改善生活的渴望,以及对自己和数字设备的集体和个人责任感。数字包容有可能提供一种途径,让服务使用者能够安全、建设性地获得服务和社会,从而改善生活。本文为进一步培养服务使用者对这一新兴领域的数字解决方案的洞察力奠定了基础。
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来源期刊
Harm Reduction Journal
Harm Reduction Journal Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
126
审稿时长
26 weeks
期刊介绍: Harm Reduction Journal is an Open Access, peer-reviewed, online journal whose focus is on the prevalent patterns of psychoactive drug use, the public policies meant to control them, and the search for effective methods of reducing the adverse medical, public health, and social consequences associated with both drugs and drug policies. We define "harm reduction" as "policies and programs which aim to reduce the health, social, and economic costs of legal and illegal psychoactive drug use without necessarily reducing drug consumption". We are especially interested in studies of the evolving patterns of drug use around the world, their implications for the spread of HIV/AIDS and other blood-borne pathogens.
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