British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, St. Paul's Hospital, 608-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V6Z 1Y6.
British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, St. Paul's Hospital, 608-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B.C., Canada V6Z 1Y6; Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2014 Jun;110:41-8. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.03.029. Epub 2014 Mar 28.
Transitions into more harmful forms of illicit drug use among youth have been identified as important foci for research and intervention. In settings around the world, the transition to crystal methamphetamine (meth) use among youth is considered a particularly dangerous and growing problem. Epidemiological evidence suggests that, particularly among young, street-involved populations, meth use is associated with numerous sex- and drug-related "risks behaviors" and negative health outcomes. Relatively few studies, however, have documented how youth themselves understand, experience and script meth use over time. From 2008 to 2012, we conducted over 100 in-depth interviews with 75 street-entrenched youth in Vancouver, Canada, as well as ongoing ethnographic fieldwork, in order to examine youth's understandings and experiences of meth use in the context of an urban drug scene. Our findings revealed positive understandings and experiences of meth in relation to other forms of drug addiction and unaddressed mental health issues. Youth were simultaneously aware of the numerous health-related harms and social costs associated with heavy meth use. Over time, positive understandings of meth may become entirely contradictory to a lived reality in which escalating meth use is a factor in further marginalizing youth, although this may not lead to cessation of use. Recognition of these multiple truths about meth, and the social structural contexts that shape the scripting of meth use among youth in particular settings, may help us to move beyond moralizing debates about how to best educate youth on the "risks" associated with meth, and towards interventions that are congruent with youth's lived experiences and needs across the lifecourse.
青少年向更有害的非法药物使用形式的转变已被确定为研究和干预的重要焦点。在世界各地的环境中,青少年转向甲基苯丙胺(冰毒)的使用被认为是一个特别危险和日益严重的问题。流行病学证据表明,特别是在年轻的、街头涉毒人群中,冰毒的使用与许多与性和药物有关的“风险行为”以及负面的健康结果有关。然而,相对较少的研究记录了青少年自己是如何随着时间的推移理解、体验和撰写冰毒使用的。2008 年至 2012 年,我们在加拿大温哥华对 75 名深陷街头的青少年进行了 100 多次深入访谈和持续的民族志实地考察,以研究青年在城市毒品环境中对冰毒使用的理解和体验。我们的研究结果表明,与其他形式的毒瘾和未解决的心理健康问题相比,他们对冰毒有积极的理解和体验。青少年同时意识到与大量冰毒使用相关的许多与健康有关的危害和社会成本。随着时间的推移,对冰毒的积极理解可能会与现实生活完全相悖,因为冰毒的使用不断加剧,会使青年进一步边缘化,尽管这可能不会导致冰毒使用的停止。认识到这些关于冰毒的多重事实,以及塑造特定环境中青少年冰毒使用脚本的社会结构背景,可能有助于我们超越关于如何最好地向青少年宣传与冰毒相关的“风险”的道德化辩论,转向与青少年的生活经历和整个生命周期的需求相一致的干预措施。