“He’s used drugs - he’s biased! He’s not a drug user - what would he know!”: A cross-sectional, online study of drug researchers’ experiential knowledge of drug use and disclosure

Danielle C. Ompad , Cho-Hee Shrader , Kyle M. Snyder , Jules Netherland , Sheila P. Vakharia , Ingrid Walker
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Abstract

Introduction

Despite the recognized value of experiential knowledge, drug use and disclosure of drug use within the drug research community is rarely discussed or studied.

Methods

We distributed a cross-sectional online survey using targeted recruitment. Researchers provided information on drug use, disclosure of use (or abstinence) professionally, and their impact via write-in text boxes. We used the general inductive approach to analyze the data.

Results

Of the sample (n=669, 43 countries), 52 % were cisgender women, 89 % had post-graduate education, and 79 % worked in academia. Most (86 %) reported lifetime drug use and 47 % past 3-month use. Among 557 researchers who used drugs, 59 % disclosed their use to institutional colleagues, 59 % to colleagues outside their institution, 25 % to research participants, and 11 % in their research/scholarship. Themes included frequency; context; meaning of drug use disclosure personally, professionally, and socially; and how drug use experience and disclosure informs research. Respondents connected their concerns about disclosure in research with issues of social identity, professional risk, and the role of stigma related to lived experience. Some respondents felt that such concerns reinforce a vacuum, noting that the inability to disclose drug use limits research questions and the knowledge base overall.

Discussion

Our findings support the dichotomy of thought surrounding the lived experience of drug use: “[They’ve] used drugs- [they’re] biased!” and “[They’re] not a drug user-what would [they] know!” Our findings provide an opportunity to reflect upon our positionality and the impact researchers’ own drug use may have on the field.

"他吸毒--他有偏见!他不是吸毒者--他懂什么!":关于毒品研究人员对毒品使用和披露的经验知识的横断面在线研究
引言尽管经验知识的价值已得到认可,但药物研究界对药物使用和披露药物使用情况的讨论或研究却少之又少。研究人员通过写入文本框提供了有关吸毒、吸毒(或戒毒)专业披露及其影响的信息。我们采用一般归纳法对数据进行了分析。结果在样本(n=669,43 个国家)中,52% 是顺性别女性,89% 接受过研究生教育,79% 在学术界工作。大多数人(86%)表示终生吸毒,47%表示过去 3 个月吸毒。在 557 名使用过毒品的研究人员中,59% 的人向机构内的同事、59% 的人向机构外的同事、25% 的人向研究参与者、11% 的人在研究/学术活动中披露了他们使用毒品的情况。主题包括频率;背景;披露吸毒对个人、职业和社会的意义;以及吸毒经历和披露如何影响研究。受访者将他们对在研究中披露信息的担忧与社会身份、职业风险以及与生活经历相关的耻辱感的作用等问题联系起来。一些受访者认为,这种担忧加剧了真空状态,指出无法披露吸毒情况限制了研究问题和整体知识基础:"他们]吸毒--[他们]有偏见!"和"[他们]不吸毒--[他们]知道什么!"我们的研究结果提供了一个机会,让我们反思自己的立场以及研究人员自身的吸毒行为可能对该领域产生的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Drug and alcohol dependence reports
Drug and alcohol dependence reports Psychiatry and Mental Health
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