Affiliation:
1. Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
Abstract
Based on fieldwork and ethnographic interviews, this article explores the subjective meanings and processes of injecting methamphetamine and risk taking among 38 participants involved in a street drug scene, including long-term methamphetamine users and dealers recruited in an inner-city Los Angeles neighborhood, as a means of gaining insight into the factors facilitating injection. There were a multitude of individual, structural, social, and spatial factors that may influence injection as a mode of methamphetamine administration, including economic conditions, perceived cost, and efficiency of specific routes of use; social role and collective identification with a street scene; physical and social settings; drug policy and fear of arrest; social network factors, including the influence of sexual partners, peers, and the normalization of injection; other drug use, including individual drug histories and preferences for specific routes of administration among particular drug users (e.g., black tar heroin); and characteristics of the local drug market.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health (social science),Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
1 articles.
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