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Volume 33, Number 2
© 2003 by the Journal of
Drug Issues
Online access is available to
paid subscribers. Online content is not to be distributed in digital
form.
The
Utility of Debriefing Questions in a Household Survey on Drug
Abuse
Michael Fendrich, Joseph
S. Wislar, Timothy P. Johnson
Since subjects are often uncomfortable
disclosing sensitive information, questions gauging respondent
reaction to survey questions about drug abuse may aid in the interpretation
of responses. Such debriefing questions can be worded subjectively,
i.e., asking subjects about their own reactions to questions,
or projectively, i.e., asking subjects about their perceptions
of the reactions of others to questions. Using data from a study
employing both types of debriefing questions, we examined whether
question wording made any difference. We evaluated the extent
to which drug reporting was associated with respondent reaction
to the survey and whether reactions varied by type of debriefing
question. A factor analysis of debriefing questions appended to
an experimental household survey on drug abuse yielded factors
reflecting distinct subjective and projective dimensions. Analyses
suggested that debriefing question wording does make a difference
with respect to respondent reaction. Contrary to expectations,
analyses suggested that those reporting drug use expressed more
discomfort on subjectively worded items and less discomfort on
projectively worded items. Subjects who self-administered their
survey also reported higher levels of subjective discomfort, as
did those with lower levels of education. The projective measures
derived from analyses were associated with three demographic variables:
Younger subjects reported higher levels of projective ease than
older subjects. Those with some college reported higher levels
of projective ease than those with the least amount of formal
education. African-Americans reported lower levels of projective
ease than White/Other subjects. Implications for the design, interpretation,
and analysis of drug use surveys are considered.
Extrinsic
Barriers to Substance Abuse Treatment Among Pregnant Drug Dependent
Women
Martha A. Jessup, Janice
C. Humphreys, Claire D. Brindis, Kathryn A. Lee
The objective of this qualitative
study was to examine extrinsic barriers to substance abuse treatment
among pregnant and parenting women enrolled in residential perinatal
substance abuse treatment programs in Northern California. Life
history interviews were conducted with 36 women to examine help-seeking
behaviors before treatment enrollment. Data analysis used the
analytic framework of Mandelbaum (1973) to describe dimensions,
turnings, and adaptations of participants. Results indicated that
the majority (n = 34) of participants sought prenatal care but
identified fear of punitive actions from helping institutions
and individuals as a major barrier. Other extrinsic barriers included
substance abuse treatment program barriers, partners, the status
of opiate dependency, and the status of pregnancy. Biological,
socio-cultural, and psychosocial dimensions of participants’
care-seeking experiences were identified. The turning was pregnancy
and adaptations included preserving the family, managing fear
and manifesting faith. Findings describe the transformation of
the therapeutic alliance and the gendered impact of two decades
of the War on Drugs in the United States. Participants’
coping strategies suggest that the desire for child custody and
concern for fetal and child well-being was a priority and motivated
care seeking despite extrinsic barriers perceived to be threatening
to the woman’s safety and autonomy.
Where
Are the Children? An Examination of Children’s Living Arrangements
When Mothers Enter Residential Drug Treatment
Danica Kalling Knight, Gail
Wallace
Although providing child care
and family residency options has become central to substance abuse
treatment for women with dependent children, research documenting
status of child coresidence prior to, during, and following treatment
is currently unavailable. The purpose of this study is to examine
the degree to which mothers are successful in maintaining or reestablishing
their role as parents during the course of treatment. The sample
included 152 female clients admitted to a residential drug treatment
program for women with dependent children. Findings document an
increase in child coresidency from admission to follow-up. Women
who entered treatment with all children or who were reunited with
children previously in others’ care at admission were over
five times more likely to coreside with all children at follow-up.
At follow-up, mothers who reported complete coresidence were more
likely to be 30 years old or younger, live independently, and
have fewer than two parenting challenges.
Using
Cannabis Therapeutically in the UK: A Qualitative Analysis
Ross Coomber, Michael Oliver,
Craig Morris
Thirty-three therapeutic cannabis
users in England were interviewed about their experiences using
an illegal drug for therapeutic purposes. Interviews were semi-structured,
and responses highly qualitative. Particular issues included how
and why cannabis was used therapeutically; what problems its illegality
posed in terms of access, cost, reliability of supply, and quality
of the product; the perceived beneficial effects of its use; and
unwanted effects (problems in relation to family, friends, partners,
the criminal justice system, and the health care system). The
study did not seek to prove or disprove the efficacy of cannabis
used as a therapeutic agent merely to report the experiences of
those who use it in that way. It was found that users perceived
cannabis to be highly effective in treating their symptoms, to
complement existing medication, and to carry fewer unwanted effects.
Smoking was the preferred method of administration, permitting
greater control over dose and administration. Problems related
to prescribed medication were motivational for many to use cannabis
therapeutically. Few problems were experienced with friends, family,
partners, and the criminal justice or health care systems, although
other concerns apropos of cannabis’s illegality were reported.
Although most were relatively unconcerned about the risk involved
and were determined to continue use, many resented that they felt
they were being forced to break the law. Problems relating to
access to the drug (in an illegal context) and managing its administration
were reported. A brief discussion of the continued prohibition
of cannabis for this group is undertaken, and a harm reduction
approach is suggested.
Evaluating
a Prison-based Drug Treatment Program in Taiwan
Michael S. Vaughn, Furjen Deng, Lou-Jou Lee
Using data collected from pre-release
and 12-month follow-up interviews with drug-using offenders, this
article evaluates the efficacy of the first prison-based drug
treatment program in Taiwan. A quasi-experimental design matching
drug-abusing offenders into treatment and nontreatment groups
was adopted. Program outcomes were measured in five domains: criminal
recidivism, post-release drug use patterns, improved family and
social relationships, problems adjusting to community life, and
mental health after release. Logistic and OLS regression were
employed to identify possible correlates of program outcomes.
The results generally failed to confirm positive outcomes generated
by the compulsory drug treatment program. Program participants
reported higher rates of recidivism and post-release illicit drug
use than nonprogram participants. Program participants also reported
more problems adjusting to community life after release. Post-release
living arrangements, friends or family members abusing illicit
drugs, and problems adjusting to community life after release
were also found to be significant correlates of recidivism and
post-treatment drug use. Post-release employment status and mental
health status were significantly related to post-treatment drug
use, but not to recidivism. Since multiple factors lead to drug
addiction, the article concludes that the structure and implementation
of Taiwan’s prison-based drug treatment program needs reform
to effect positive behavioral change on drug-abusing offenders.
The
Effects of Drug Treatment and Supervision on Time to Rearrest
Among Drug Treatment Court Participants
Duren Banks, Denise C. Gottfredson
Past research has generally
shown that drug courts are reaching their target offenders and
that program participants are rearrested at a lower or equivalent
rate than comparison offenders. Few analyses have been conducted
to test the relative effects of different drug court elements,
however. The current research takes a closer look at the two main
components of the drug court, supervision and treatment, to determine
whether one is more effective at preventing failure, or whether
the combination of both is necessary to observe a decreased risk
of failure. Attending treatment significantly decreased the risk
of failure over a two-year follow-up period, while receiving supervision
did not. Offenders who received both supervision and treatment
had the longest survival times, but not significantly longer than
those who received treatment only. Implications for drug courts
in general are discussed, as well as avenues for future research
in this field.
An
Exploratory Study of Contextual and Situational Factors Related
to Methamphetamine Use Among Gay and Bisexual Men in New York
City
Perry N. Halkitis, Jeffrey
T. Parsons, Leo Wilton
This exploratory investigation
describes methamphetamine use among a convenience sample of gay
and bisexual men in New York City. A total of 49 participants
reported using methamphetamines, on average, 12 days over the
past three months, and 63.1% of the participants reporting use
with the majority of their sexual encounters. Poly-substance use
was high in this sample of methamphetamine users. Methamphetamine
use was more frequent among those men who reported using the drug
in bathhouses and bars, and frequency of use was associated with
a need to escape unpleasant emotions and physical discomfort,
avoid social conflict, and enjoy pleasant times with others. The
data suggest a contextual understanding of methamphetamine use
in New York City that is similar to that of gay communities of
the Western United States.
Limited
Rationality and the Limits of Supply Reduction
Jonathan P. Caulkins, Robert
MacCoun
Drug markets have been targeted
for increasingly tough enforcement, yet retail prices for cocaine
and heroin have fallen by 70-80%. No research has explained adequately
why prices have fallen. This paper explores the possibility that
part of the explanation may lie in the failure of drug dealers
to respond to risks the way the simplest rational actor models
might predict.
Drug
Reform Principles and Policy Debates: Harm Reduction Prospects
for Cannabis in Canada
Andrew D. Hathaway, Patricia
G. Erickson
Contrasting the official harm
reduction aims of Canada’s 10-year national drug strategy
with the actual evolution of the Controlled Drugs and Substances
Act, the authors find little evidence of harm reduction, and much
of sustained and punitive prohibition. The example of the criminal
sanctions currently being applied to cannabis possession offences
serves to illustrate the limits of what can be achieved in reducing
the impact of criminalization when the fundamental ban on personal
use and access is retained. Theoretically informed by constructionist
analyses of the styles and strategies of social problems discourse,
a moral basis of drug use entitlement is expounded from which
rational reform might be more fruitfully argued. Despite its official
mandate in Canada to develop more pragmatic drug policy alternatives,
the harm reduction movement, posing public health solutions based
on empirical analysis, is nonetheless needful of a rhetorical
foundation by which to denounce prohibition as a morally objectionable
intervention in the private lives of individuals.
Transitions
from Treatment to Work: Employment Patterns Following Publicly
Funded Substance Abuse Treatment
Elizabeth M. Ginexi, Mark
A. Foss, Christy K. Scott
This investigation involved
a first-attempt at modeling long-term treatment and work trajectories
in a large, urban sample of individuals in publicly funded substance
abuse treatment: (a) determining the demographic factors that
predicted work patterns and (b) examining the longitudinal relationship
between work status and continued treatment, persistent drug use,
and psychological problems investigated work status across three
years. Mixed-effects regression models revealed that significantly
more participants were working and looking for work at each follow-up.
Gains in labor force participation were greatest at six months
while gains in employment were greatest at 24 months. Several
demographic variables predicted later work status including age,
gender, living arrangement, occupational skills, and having children
in foster care. Participants who continued treatment, continued
to use drugs, or reported psychological problems were most likely
to be out of the labor force. By far, the greatest barrier to
long-term employment was continued drug use.
Research
Note: Acceptability and Utility of a Hand-held Syringe Disposal
Device for Active Injection Drug Users
Grace E. Macalino, Rachel
S. Weston, Francis A. Wolf, Stephanie L. Sanford-Colby, Michell
M. McKenzie, Josiah D. Rich
Efforts to prevent the spread
of HIV and hepatitis among injection drug users (IDUs) by improving
access to sterile syringes can raise questions about syringe disposal.
This study sought to evaluate the acceptability and utility of
the Voyager, a newly approved, hand-held syringe disposal device
for active injection drug users (IDUs). We offered the Voyager
to active IDUs (n = 97), and interviewed them upon receiving the
device and one month later. Almost all (90%) accepted the device.
At follow-up, 78% had used the Voyager and 44% reported using
it all the time; 65% reported they would like to continue using
the Voyager and 77% rated the device “somewhat better”
or “much better” than other methods of syringe disposal.
Many IDUs care about safe syringe disposal and are willing and
able to use a convenient disposal device such as the Voyager.
Communities concerned about needlestick injuries and re-use of
contaminated syringes should explore increasing the availability
of such a device for IDUs as part of an overall approach to prevent
improperly discarded syringes.
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