British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, St. Paul's Hospital, 400-1045 Howe Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6Z 2A9; Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, St. Paul's Hospital, 400-1045 Howe Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6Z 2A9.
Health Place. 2018 Sep;53:86-93. doi: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2018.07.011. Epub 2018 Jul 27.
Vancouver, Canada is experiencing an overdose crisis due to the proliferation of fentanyl and related analogues and novel overdose response interventions are being implemented across multiple high overdose risk environments, including emergency shelters. We draw on ethnographic fieldwork and qualitative interviews to examine how social, structural, and physical contexts at two emergency shelters implementing a peer-based supervised injection intervention influenced injection drug use and overdose risks. Findings reveal that the implementation of this intervention reduced stigma and shame through the normalization of drug use in shelter spaces, and yet underlying social norms and material constraints led people to inject alone in non-designated injecting spaces. Whereas these spatial dynamics of injection drug use potentially increased overdose vulnerability, an emerging sense of collective responsibility in relation to the overdose crisis led to the routinization of peer witnessing practices across the shelter environment to extend the impact of the intervention.
加拿大温哥华正面临阿片类药物(尤其是芬太尼及其类似物)泛滥导致的药物过量危机,因此在多个高风险药物过量环境(包括紧急避难所)中实施了新型的药物过量应对干预措施。我们借鉴人种志实地调查和定性访谈,研究了在两家实施基于同伴监督的注射干预措施的紧急避难所中,社会、结构和物理环境如何影响药物注射和药物过量风险。研究结果显示,该干预措施通过将药物使用正常化,减少了庇护所空间内的污名和羞耻感,但潜在的社会规范和物质限制导致人们在非指定的注射空间独自注射。虽然这些注射药物的空间动态可能增加了药物过量的脆弱性,但由于人们对药物过量危机的集体责任感不断增强,促使同伴监督实践在庇护所环境中得到常规化,从而扩大了干预措施的影响。