Ataiants Janna, Roth Alexis M, Mazzella Silvana, Lankenau Stephen E
Department of Community Health and Prevention, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, 3215 Market St, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Department of Community Health and Prevention, Dornsife School of Public Health, Drexel University, 3215 Market St, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Int J Drug Policy. 2020 Apr;78:102691. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2020.102691. Epub 2020 Feb 18.
Current discourses about the causes of the overdose crisis largely focus on the harmful effects of drugs. Prior research, however, indicates that drug use experience is shaped by complex interactions of drugs with physiological and mental "sets" of people who use drugs and the wider social and physical "setting." Zinberg's "drug, set, and setting" theoretical framework was applied to identify patterns in circumstances leading up to women's overdose.
In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with 29 opioid-injecting street-involved women, clients of a Philadelphia harm reduction program. Qualitative analysis with deductive and inductive coding was utilized to examine transcripts for theory-driven and emerging themes.
Ten out of 29 women attributed their overdose to "drugs," reporting the unpredictable quality of street opioids, concurrent use of benzodiazepines, or chasing the "high." Thirteen women reported "set" as a type of circumstance where their emotional states were affected by a "good" or "bad" day, leading them to unusual drug consumption practices. Six women described "setting" type of circumstances where their overdose was preceded by a recent change in context, such as release from prison, which prompted unsafe drug use to address physiological or psychological dependence on drugs.
While all overdoses result from the pharmacological action of drugs, some overdoses were triggered by circumstances occurring in women's set or setting. Overdose prevention policies should embrace not only individual-level behavioral interventions, but also structural measures to address stress, social isolation, and risky drug use contexts that plague the lives of street-involved women who inject opioids.
当前关于过量用药危机成因的论述主要聚焦于药物的有害影响。然而,先前的研究表明,药物使用体验是由药物与吸毒者的生理和心理“状态”以及更广泛的社会和物理“环境”之间的复杂相互作用所塑造的。津伯格的“药物、状态和环境”理论框架被用于识别导致女性过量用药的情况模式。
对29名参与街头注射阿片类药物的女性进行了深入的半结构化访谈,她们都是费城减少伤害项目的客户。采用演绎和归纳编码的定性分析方法来检查访谈记录,以找出理论驱动的主题和新出现的主题。
29名女性中有10名将她们的过量用药归因于“药物”,称街头阿片类药物质量不可预测、同时使用苯二氮䓬类药物或追求“快感”。13名女性报告称“状态”是一种情况,她们的情绪状态受到“好”或“坏”的一天的影响,导致她们采取不寻常的吸毒行为。6名女性描述了“环境”类型的情况,她们过量用药之前最近环境发生了变化,比如从监狱获释,这促使她们为了应对对药物的生理或心理依赖而进行不安全的药物使用。
虽然所有过量用药都是由药物的药理作用导致的,但有些过量用药是由女性的状态或环境中发生的情况引发的。过量用药预防政策不仅应包括个人层面的行为干预措施,还应包括结构性措施,以应对困扰参与街头注射阿片类药物女性生活的压力、社会孤立和危险的药物使用环境。