Lopez-Zetina Javier, Sanchez-Huesca Ricardo, Rios-Ellis Britt, Friis Robert, Torres-Vigil Isabel, Rogala Bridget
Health Science Department, California State University, 1250 Bellflower Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90840-4902, USA.
J Ethn Subst Abuse. 2010;9(1):28-39. doi: 10.1080/15332640903539120.
This article examines comparative risk behaviors associated with methamphetamine use in a binational sample of women in the border cities of Tijuana, Mexico, and San Diego, California. Specifically, the study examined the differences and similarities in drug use and sexual risk behavior and the patterns of initiation to methamphetamine use. The binational pilot sample consisted of 70 adult women in Tijuana and 55 women in San Diego. Although there were important differences in the presentation of risk behavior and patterns of initiation between the two binational samples, women on both sides of the US-Mexico border also showed remarkable similarities in their risk profile. Results from this study suggest that despite significant cultural and socioeconomic differences between the study cities, certain specific substance abuse patterns (e.g., methamphetamine use) in border regions with an increasing demographic exchange and integration are emerging as an "equalizer" of risk, capable of dissolving context-based differentiating factors, and creating a more homogenous subpopulation of substance users.
本文考察了墨西哥蒂华纳市和加利福尼亚州圣地亚哥市边境城市中一个双边女性样本与甲基苯丙胺使用相关的比较风险行为。具体而言,该研究考察了药物使用和性风险行为的差异与相似之处,以及甲基苯丙胺使用的起始模式。双边试点样本包括70名蒂华纳的成年女性和55名圣地亚哥的女性。尽管两个双边样本在风险行为表现和起始模式上存在重要差异,但美墨边境两侧的女性在风险概况上也表现出显著的相似性。这项研究的结果表明,尽管研究城市之间存在重大的文化和社会经济差异,但在人口交流和融合不断增加的边境地区,某些特定的药物滥用模式(如甲基苯丙胺使用)正成为一种风险“均衡器”,能够消除基于背景的区分因素,并创造出一个更加同质化的药物使用亚群体。