Lankenau Stephen E, Sanders Bill
University of Southern California, Keck School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, 6430 Sunset Boulevard, Suite 1500, Los Angeles, CA 90028, USA.
J Psychoactive Drugs. 2007 Mar;39(1):21-9. doi: 10.1080/02791072.2007.10399861.
Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic that has emerged as an increasingly popular choice among young drug users. Recent research indicates the presence of hidden populations of young people who inject ketamine in New York and other U.S. cities. Applying an ethno-epidemiological approach, the authors recruited 40 young injection drug users (IDUs) (< 25 years old) in New York City to explore health risks associated with ketamine use. This analysis looks at the varying patterns and frequencies of ketamine injection by examining personal, social, and cultural aspects of these young people's lives. We learned that drug-using histories, experiential dimensions, sociocultural characteristics, and associations with other young people help account for the different patterns of injecting ketamine within the sample. In particular, these findings indicate that young people who were more frequent ketamine injectors had the following characteristics: initiated injection drug use with ketamine; enjoyed the effects of ketamine, were stably housed; lived in the vicinity of New York City; and associated with others who also injected ketamine.
氯胺酮是一种分离麻醉剂,在年轻吸毒者中越来越受欢迎。最近的研究表明,在纽约和美国其他城市存在注射氯胺酮的年轻隐蔽人群。作者采用民族流行病学方法,在纽约市招募了40名年轻注射吸毒者(年龄<25岁),以探讨与使用氯胺酮相关的健康风险。该分析通过研究这些年轻人生活的个人、社会和文化方面,考察氯胺酮注射的不同模式和频率。我们了解到,吸毒史、体验维度、社会文化特征以及与其他年轻人的关联有助于解释样本中氯胺酮注射的不同模式。特别是,这些发现表明,更频繁注射氯胺酮的年轻人具有以下特征:开始注射吸毒时使用氯胺酮;喜欢氯胺酮的效果;有稳定住所;居住在纽约市附近;并且与其他也注射氯胺酮的人交往。