Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
School of Public Health, University of Montreal, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Cult Health Sex. 2021 Jul;23(7):883-898. doi: 10.1080/13691058.2020.1736634. Epub 2020 May 28.
The objective of this study was to identify how cannabis use features within the sexual lives of young sexual minority men who use substances, and how this might intersect with features of their contemporary socio-cultural contexts in a setting where non-medical cannabis was recently legalised: Vancouver, Canada. Forty-one sexual minority men ages 15 to 30 years were recruited between January and December 2018 to participate in in-depth, semi-structured 1-2 h interviews about their experiences of using substances (e.g. cannabis) for sex. Drawing on constant comparative analytic techniques, two themes emerged with regards to participants' perceptions of, and experiences with, the sexualised use of cannabis. First, participants described how they used cannabis for sex to increase sexual pleasure and lower inhibitions. Second, participants described using cannabis for sex to reduce feelings of anxiety and shame, and foster intimacy and connection with sexual partners. These findings identify how the sexualised use of cannabis functions as a 'strategic resource' for sexual minority men to deliberately achieve both physiological and psychoactive effects, while concurrently underscoring the extent to which the contexts, patterns and motivations associated with cannabis use for sex parallel those associated with this form of Chemsex.
本研究旨在明确性少数群体年轻男性在物质使用背景下的性行为中如何使用大麻,以及在最近大麻非医用合法化的背景下,他们的当代社会文化背景中的哪些特征会与之相互交织:加拿大温哥华。2018 年 1 月至 12 月期间,招募了 41 名年龄在 15 至 30 岁之间的性少数群体男性,以参与深入的半结构化 1-2 小时访谈,了解他们使用物质(如大麻)进行性活动的经验。通过使用不断比较的分析技术,针对参与者对大麻的性化使用的看法和经验出现了两个主题。首先,参与者描述了他们如何使用大麻来提高性快感并降低抑制感。其次,参与者描述了他们使用大麻来缓解焦虑和羞耻感,促进与性伴侣的亲密感和联系。这些发现表明,大麻的性化使用如何成为性少数群体男性的一种“战略资源”,以有意实现生理和心理效应,同时强调了与性活动中使用大麻相关的背景、模式和动机与 Chemsex 形式的使用相似的程度。