注射器服务计划的工作人员和参与者对改变药物消费行为以应对甲氧苄啶掺假的看法。

IF 4 2区 社会学 Q1 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
William H Eger, Marina Plesons, Tyler S Bartholomew, Angela R Bazzi, Maia H Hauschild, Corbin C McElrath, Cyrus Owens, David W Forrest, Hansel E Tookes, Erika L Crable
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在北美不受管制的毒品供应中,异丙嗪是一种越来越常见的掺杂物,它与不良健康后果(如皮肤感染、用药过量)有关。然而,对于如何最初发现异丙嗪以及注射器服务计划(SSP)工作人员和客户(吸毒者)如何应对异丙嗪的出现,还存在很大的知识差距:2023年6月至7月,我们对迈阿密一家注射器服务计划的医务人员(如临床医生)和一线工作人员(如外联工作者)以及有注射吸毒史的成年客户进行了定性访谈。归纳备忘录确定了出现的代码;主题分析在团队共识的基础上确定了最终主题:通过对 SSP 工作人员(n = 8)和客户(n = 17)的访谈,发现在不同时期以不同方式出现了异丙嗪。最初,在 2022 年夏季,服务对象发现了一种 "类似镇静剂的物质",这种物质会加重镇静和戒断症状,并造成伤口。后来,SSP 的医务人员通过治疗新的医疗病例,并通过包括专业协会和新闻来源在内的各种信息共享网络,确定这种掺杂物为甲苯噻嗪;然而,SSP 的一线员工和客户需要更多有关甲苯噻嗪及其副作用的教育资源。由于对如何减少异丙嗪危害的指导有限,SSP 客户改变了他们的毒品消费路线,减少了毒品使用,并依靠同龄人在毒品供应方面的经验来保护自己。一些人还报告说,他们更喜欢使用掺杂了异丙嗪的阿片类药物,并增加了毒品使用量,包括使用兴奋剂以避免过度镇静:甲氧苄啶的出现是当前不受管制的毒品供应发生前所未有变化的时代特征。我们发现,异丙嗪在吸毒者中引发了重要的行为变化(例如,从注射过渡到吸食)。将这些经验纳入早期毒品预警监测系统,并扩大毒品检查服务和更安全的吸食供应分配,有助于减轻恶嗪和其他新出现的掺杂物对健康造成的重大危害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Syringe services program staff and participant perspectives on changing drug consumption behaviors in response to xylazine adulteration.

Background: Xylazine is an increasingly common adulterant in the North American unregulated drug supply that is associated with adverse health outcomes (e.g., skin infections, overdose). However, there are significant knowledge gaps regarding how xylazine was initially identified and how syringe services program (SSP) staff and clients (people who use drugs) responded to its emergence.

Methods: From June-July 2023, we conducted qualitative interviews with medical (e.g., clinicians) and frontline SSP staff (e.g., outreach workers) and adult clients with a history of injection drug use at a Miami-based SSP. Inductive memos identified emergent codes; thematic analysis involving team consensus established final themes.

Results: From interviews with SSP staff (n = 8) and clients (n = 17), xylazine emergence was identified at different times, in various ways. Initially, during summer 2022, clients identified a "tranquilizer-like substance" that worsened sedation and withdrawal and caused wounds. SSP medical staff later identified this adulterant as xylazine by treating new medical cases and through diverse information-sharing networks that included professional societies and news sources; however, frontline SSP staff and clients needed additional educational resources about xylazine and its side effects. With limited guidance on how to reduce harm from xylazine, SSP clients altered their drug consumption routes, reduced drug use, and relied on peers' experiences with the drug supply to protect themselves. Some individuals also reported preferring xylazine-adulterated opioids and increasing their drug use, including the use of stimulants to avoid over sedation.

Conclusions: Xylazine's emergence characterizes the current era of unprecedented shifts in the unregulated drug supply. We found that xylazine spurred important behavioral changes among people who use drugs (e.g., transitioning from injecting to smoking). Incorporating these experiences into early drug warning surveillance systems and scaling up drug-checking services and safer smoking supply distribution could help mitigate significant health harms caused by xylazine and other emergent adulterants.

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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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