Developing a coordinated response to chemsex across health, justice and social care settings: expert consensus statement

Author:

Hillier BradleyORCID,Carthy EliottORCID,Kalk NicolaORCID,Moncrieff Monty,Pakianathan MarkORCID,Tracy DerekORCID,Bowden-Jones OwenORCID,Hickson FordORCID,Forrester AndrewORCID

Abstract

Summary Chemsex occurs primarily among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM), and there is evidence of a subgroup of users who carry out chemsex-related criminal offences and experience harm. Challenges with chemsex can present to various settings; there are concerns that harm is increasing, including at interfaces between health, social care and criminal justice systems. The UK response to date has lacked a coordinated approach. An expert reference group was convened to share chemsex knowledge, articulate priorities for research and pathway development, and foster collaborative working between agencies. It made three key recommendations: develop and increase training and awareness across all services; implement a coordinated research programme with the development of a common data-set and assessment tool to fully characterise population-level needs; develop a professional network to share information, provide professional support and act as a knowledge hub. There was support for a unified multi-agency strategy incorporating the priorities identified as overarching principles.

Publisher

Royal College of Psychiatrists

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3. 4 Weatherburn, P , Hickson, F , Reid, D , Schink, S , Marcus, U , Schmidt, A . EMIS-2017: The European Men-Who-Have-Sex-With-Men Internet Survey. European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, 2017.

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