British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, 400-1045 Howe St, Vancouver, BC, V6Z 2A9, Canada.
School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Harm Reduct J. 2023 Jul 31;20(1):100. doi: 10.1186/s12954-023-00835-5.
Alcohol consumption is common among young men and occurs in many contexts. The sexualized substance use literature has generated some insight into the role of alcohol alongside other substances in the context of sex, though there remain opportunities for targeted and context-sensitive studies to examine the sexual practices and outcomes associated with alcohol, specifically.
This interpretive description study explores how experiences and contexts of alcohol use feature in the sexual lives of young men who use substances with sex. Data collection involved in-depth interviews conducted between 2018 and 2021 in Vancouver, Canada, with N = 76 young men (ages 18-30; mean = 23.9 years) who use substances with sex, including men with diverse sexual identities. Data were analyzed in an iterative manner through a social constructivist lens and an interpretive description framework, leveraging constant comparison techniques.
This analysis yielded three interconnected themes: (1) using alcohol for sexual(ity) freedoms; (2) backgrounding alcohol within a sexualized polysubstance milieu; and (3) navigating the risks and consequences of using alcohol with sex. Alcohol use was found to reduce inhibitions and support experimentation, including by facilitating the transgression of conservative or restrictive social and sexual norms. Alcohol was seldom explicitly classified as a sexualized substance, though it was evidently a widespread and normative social practice. This practice was associated with important risk and consequences, including with respect to consent, pregnancy and sexually transmitted and bloodborne infection risk, and sexual dysfunction.
Findings from this study position alcohol as a backgrounded yet significantly influential substance that young men use with sex. The sexualized use of substances must be understood, and responded to, in a manner that is grounded in harm reduction and that considers the full spectrum of substances-inclusive of but not limited to alcohol-and associated benefits and risks that feature in young men's sexual lives. Specifically, sexual health and primary care providers working with young men should invite and open up meaningful conversation about how they may be using substances (including alcohol) with sex, while offering de-stigmatizing, sex-positive, and affirming education and supports to promote safer sex and substance use.
在年轻人中,饮酒行为很常见,且发生在许多情境中。关于性化物质使用的文献已经深入探讨了酒精与其他物质在性行为背景下的作用,但仍有机会进行有针对性和敏感情境的研究,以专门研究与酒精相关的性行为和结果,特别是在年轻人中。
本解释性描述研究探讨了在有性经历的年轻人中,物质使用与性的背景下,他们的饮酒经历和情境是如何影响其性生活的。数据收集涉及 2018 年至 2021 年期间在加拿大温哥华进行的深入访谈,受访者为 76 名有性经历的年轻男性(年龄 18-30 岁;平均 23.9 岁),他们使用物质与性相关,包括具有不同性身份的男性。研究人员通过社会建构主义视角和解释性描述框架,利用恒比技术,以迭代方式分析数据。
该分析得出了三个相互关联的主题:(1)使用酒精追求性(别)自由;(2)将酒精置于性化多物质环境中;(3)应对使用酒精与性相关的风险和后果。研究发现,饮酒可以降低抑制,支持实验,包括通过跨越保守或限制的社会和性规范。酒精很少被明确归类为性化物质,但它显然是一种广泛存在且规范的社会行为。这种行为与重要的风险和后果有关,包括与同意、怀孕和性传播及血液传播感染风险以及性功能障碍有关。
本研究的结果表明,酒精是年轻人在有性经历时使用的一种背景化但具有重要影响力的物质。必须以基于减少伤害的方式理解和应对年轻人的物质使用的性化问题,同时考虑到他们性生活中包含但不限于酒精的各种物质以及相关的益处和风险。具体来说,与年轻人合作的性健康和初级保健提供者应邀请他们并就他们如何可能与性一起使用物质(包括酒精)进行有意义的对话,同时提供去污名化、性积极和肯定的教育和支持,以促进安全性行为和物质使用。