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Mwale S, Northcott A, Lambert I, Featherstone K. 'Becoming restrained': Conceptualising restrictive practices in the care of people living with dementia in acute hospital settings. SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS 2024. [PMID: 38965749 DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.13812] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/04/2023] [Accepted: 06/03/2024] [Indexed: 07/06/2024]
Abstract
The use of restrictive practices within health and social care has attracted policy and practice attention, predominantly focusing on children and young people with mental health conditions, learning disabilities and autism. However, despite growing appreciation of the need to improve care quality for people living with dementia (PLWD), the potentially routine use of restrictive practices in their care has received little attention. PLWD are at significant risk of experiencing restrictive practices during unscheduled acute hospital admissions. In everyday routine hospital care of PLWD, concerns about subtle and less visible forms of restrictive practices and their impacts remain. This article draws on Deleuze's concepts of 'assemblage' and 'event' to conceptualise restrictive practices as institutional, interconnection social and political attitudes and organisational cultural practices. We argue that this approach illuminates the diverse ways restrictive practices are used, legitimatised and perpetuated in the care of PLWD. We examine restrictive practices in acute care contexts, understanding their use requires examining the wider socio-political, organisational cultures and professional practice contexts in which clinical practices occurs. Whereas 'events' and 'assemblages' have predominantly been used to examine embodied entanglements in diverse health contexts, examining restrictive practices as a structural assemblage extends the application of this theoretical framework.
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Affiliation(s)
- Shadreck Mwale
- Geller Institute of Ageing and Memory, University of West London, Ealing, UK
| | - Andy Northcott
- Geller Institute of Ageing and Memory, University of West London, Ealing, UK
| | - Imogen Lambert
- The Rights Lab, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
| | - Katie Featherstone
- Geller Institute of Ageing and Memory, University of West London, Ealing, UK
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Barnett A, Pienaar K, Lubman DI, Arunogiri S, Phan V, Hayes V, Lintzeris N, Savic M. The dynamics of more-than-human care in depot buprenorphine treatment: A new materialist analysis of Australian patients' experiences. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2024; 127:104399. [PMID: 38636315 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2024.104399] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 09/30/2023] [Revised: 03/05/2024] [Accepted: 03/21/2024] [Indexed: 04/20/2024]
Abstract
BACKGROUND Long-acting injectable depot buprenorphine has become an important treatment option for the management of opioid dependence. However, little is known about patients' experiences of depot buprenorphine and its embodied effects. This qualitative study aims to explore patients' experiences of depot buprenorphine treatment, including how it feels within the body, experiences of dosing cycles across time, and how this form of treatment relies on wider ecologies of care beyond the clinical encounter. METHODS Participants were recruited from sites in Sydney, regional New South Wales, and Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Thirty participants (16 men, 14 women) participated in semi-structured interviews. Participants had histories of both heroin and prescription opioid consumption, and opioid agonist therapy including daily dosing of buprenorphine and methadone. RESULTS Our analysis illuminates: (1) how patients' expectations and concerns about treatment are linked to past embodied experiences of withdrawal and uncertainty about the effectiveness of depot buprenorphine; (2) the diverse meanings patients attribute to the depot buprenorphine substrate 'under the skin'; and, (3) how depot buprenorphine is embedded within wider ecologies of care, such as counselling and social supports. CONCLUSION Our analysis destabilises commonplace assumptions about a linear, causal relationship between the pharmacological action of depot buprenorphine and experiences of treatment. Instead, it highlights patients' variable experiences of depot buprenorphine, tracing the everyday practices, embodied feelings, expectations and wider networks of care that shape patient experiences. We conclude with some reflections on the implications of our analysis for alcohol and other drug treatment, specifically how they might inform the design of client education materials and care.
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Affiliation(s)
- Anthony Barnett
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia.
| | - Kiran Pienaar
- Sociology, School of Humanities and Social Science, Faculty of Arts and Education, Deakin University, Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health & Society (ARCSHS), La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC, Australia
| | - Dan I Lubman
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia
| | - Shalini Arunogiri
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia
| | - Vicky Phan
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia
| | - Vicky Hayes
- Drug and Alcohol Services, South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, NSW, Australia
| | - Nicholas Lintzeris
- Drug and Alcohol Services, South Eastern Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, NSW, Australia
| | - Michael Savic
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia.
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A matter of craving-An archeology of relapse prevention in Swedish addiction treatment. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2022; 101:103575. [PMID: 34990982 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2021.103575] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 10/12/2021] [Revised: 12/13/2021] [Accepted: 12/22/2021] [Indexed: 11/24/2022]
Abstract
This article concerns how craving is approached and handled, how it is 'made up', in the practice of so-called relapse prevention (RP) for addiction problems. There is a lack of research on what RP in general, and craving in particular, 'is' and can become across settings. Drawing upon science and technology studies (STS) and critical addiction research, we analyze how craving is enacted in manuals and training material related to the intervention, and in interviews with professionals in the Swedish treatment system. Adopting an archeological approach, we scrutinize different layers of craving enactments in RP, in search of assumptions that give rise to what John Law refers to as 'collateral realities'. We identified three collateral realities: 1) 'The materialization of craving'; 2) 'The transcendence of the individual' and 3) 'The merging of treatment and everyday life' The data show that the brain, cognition, emotions and behavior are enacted in RP as demarcated targets of intervention that the individual can transcend and control. This approach, in turn, relies on the more foundational tenet that there are no clear-cut boundaries between different identities (I/me/self; body/brain/cognition), between different settings (inside/outside treatment; real/imagined situations) or between different points in time (now/then/before). We discuss the relevance and usefulness of addiction treatment realities where craving is approached as a stable object that can be effectively treated, and where interventions inaugurate neoliberal governance of responsibilized individuals.
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"With a PICC line, you never miss": The role of peripherally inserted central catheters in hospital care for people living with HIV/HCV who use drugs. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2021; 96:103438. [PMID: 34593288 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2021.103438] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 02/12/2021] [Revised: 08/21/2021] [Accepted: 08/23/2021] [Indexed: 11/22/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND People who use drugs (PWUD), and especially those who inject drugs, are at increased risk of acquiring bloodborne infections (e.g., HIV and HCV), experiencing drug-related harms (e.g., abscesses and overdose), and being hospitalized and requiring inpatient parenteral antibiotic therapy delivered through a peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC). The use of PICC lines with PWUD is understood to be a source of tension in hospital settings but has not been well researched. Drawing on theoretical and analytic insights from "new materialism," we consider the assemblage of sociomaterial elements that inform the use of PICCs. METHODS This paper draws on n = 50 interviews conducted across two related qualitative research projects within a program of research about the impact of substance use on hospital admissions from the perspective of healthcare providers (HCPs) and people living with HIV/HCV who use drugs. This paper focuses on data about PICC lines collected in both studies. RESULTS The decision to provide, maintain, or remove a PICC is based on a complex assemblage of factors (e.g., infections, bodies, drugs, memories, relations, spaces, temporalities, and contingencies) beyond whether parenteral intravenous antibiotic therapy is clinically indicated. HCPs expressed concerns about the risk posed by past, current, and future drug use, and contact with non-clinical spaces (e.g., patient's homes and the surrounding community), with some opting for second-line treatments and removing PICCs. The majority of PWUD described being subjected to threats of discharge and increased monitoring despite being too ill to use their PICC lines during past hospital admissions. A subset of PWUD reported using their PICC lines to inject drugs as a harm reduction strategy, and a subset of HCPs reported providing harm reduction-centred care. CONCLUSION Our analysis has implications for theorizing the role of PICC lines in the care of PWUD and identifies practical guidance for engaging them in productive and non-judgemental discussions about the risks of injecting into a PICC line, how to do it safely, and about medically supported alternatives.
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Ekendahl M, Karlsson P. Fixed and fluid at the same time: how service providers make sense of relapse prevention in Swedish addiction treatment. CRITICAL PUBLIC HEALTH 2021. [DOI: 10.1080/09581596.2021.1951170] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 10/20/2022]
Affiliation(s)
- Mats Ekendahl
- Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden
| | - Patrik Karlsson
- Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden
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Barnett A, Savic M, Pienaar K, Carter A, Warren N, Sandral E, Manning V, Lubman DI. Enacting 'more-than-human' care: Clients' and counsellors' views on the multiple affordances of chatbots in alcohol and other drug counselling. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2020; 94:102910. [PMID: 33059955 PMCID: PMC7550115 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2020.102910] [Citation(s) in RCA: 11] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/24/2020] [Revised: 07/31/2020] [Accepted: 08/04/2020] [Indexed: 01/08/2023]
Abstract
Forms of artificial intelligence (AI), such as chatbots that provide automated online counselling, promise to revolutionise alcohol and other drug treatment. Although the replacement of human counsellors remains a speculative prospect, chatbots for ‘narrow AI’ tasks (e.g., assessment and referral) are increasingly being used to augment clinical practice. Little research has addressed the possibilities for care that chatbots may generate in the future, particularly in the context of alcohol and other drug counselling. To explore these issues, we draw on the concept of technological ‘affordances’ and identify the range of possibilities for care that emerging chatbot interventions may afford and foreclose depending on the contexts in which they are implemented. Our analysis is based on qualitative data from interviews with clients (n=20) and focus group discussions with counsellors (n=8) conducted as part of a larger study of an Australian online alcohol and other drug counselling service. Both clients and counsellors expressed a concern that chatbot interventions lacked a ‘human’ element, which they valued in empathic care encounters. Most clients reported that they would share less information with a chatbot than a human counsellor, and they viewed this as constraining care. However, clients and counsellors suggested that the use of narrow AI might afford possibilities for performing discrete tasks, such as screening, triage or referral. In the context of what we refer to as ‘more-than-human’ care, our findings reveal complex views about the types of affordances that chatbots may produce and foreclose in online care encounters. We conclude by discussing implications for the potential ‘addiction futures’ and care trajectories that AI technologies offer, focussing on how they might inform alcohol and other drug policy, and the design of digital healthcare.
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Affiliation(s)
- Anthony Barnett
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia.
| | - Michael Savic
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia
| | - Kiran Pienaar
- School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia; and School of Social Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
| | - Adrian Carter
- School of Psychological Sciences and Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia and University of Queensland Centre of Clinical Research, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia
| | - Narelle Warren
- School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
| | - Emma Sandral
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia
| | - Victoria Manning
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia
| | - Dan I Lubman
- Monash Addiction Research Centre, Eastern Health Clinical School, Monash University, VIC and Turning Point, Eastern Health, Richmond, VIC, Australia
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Abstract
Drugged bodies are commonly depicted as passive, suffering and abject, which makes it hard for them to be known in other ways. Wanting to get closer to these alternative bodies and their resourcefulness for living, I turned to body-mapping as an inventive method for telling different kinds of drug-using stories. Drawing on a research project with people who inject heroin and crack cocaine in London, UK, I employed body-mapping as a way of studying drugged bodies in their relation to others, human and non-human, in the injecting event. I invited participants to draw their bodies in describing these otherwise hard-to-articulate experiences. Following Donna Haraway, I conceptualise body-mapping as a more-than-human mode of storytelling where different kinds of bodies can be known. Here, I look at three such bodies - sensing-bodies, temporal-bodies and environment-bodies - and argue that it is through being able to respond to such bodies that more hospitable ways of living with drugs can become possible.
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Affiliation(s)
- Fay Dennis
- Fay Dennis.
Extra material:http://theoryculturesociety.org
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Critical studies of harm reduction: Overdose response in uncertain political times. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2019; 76:102615. [PMID: 31837567 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2019.102615] [Citation(s) in RCA: 19] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 03/06/2019] [Revised: 11/14/2019] [Accepted: 12/02/2019] [Indexed: 12/20/2022]
Abstract
North America continues to witness escalating rates of opioid overdose deaths. Scale-up of existing and innovative life-saving services - such as overdose prevention sites (OPS) as well as sanctioned and unsanctioned supervised consumption sites - is urgently needed. Is there a place for critical theory-informed studies of harm reduction during times of drug policy failures and overdose crisis? There are different approaches to consider from the critical literature, such as those that, for example, interrogate the basic principles of harm reduction or those that critique the lack of pleasure in the discourses surrounding drug use. Influenced by such work, we examine the development of OPS in Canada, with a focus on recent experiences from the province of Ontario, as an important example of the impacts associated with moving from grassroots harm reduction to institutionalised policy and practice. Services appear to be most innovative, dynamic, and inclusive when people with lived experience, allies, and service providers are directly responding to fast-changing drug use patterns and crises on the ground, before services become formally bureaucratised. We suggest a continuing need to both critically theorise harm reduction and to build strong community relationships in harm reduction work, in efforts to overcome political moves that impede collaboration with and inclusiveness of people who use drugs.
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Mwale S. 'Becoming-with' a repeat healthy volunteer: Managing and negotiating trust among repeat healthy volunteers in commercial clinical drug trials. Soc Sci Med 2019; 245:112670. [PMID: 31786462 DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112670] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/17/2019] [Revised: 11/03/2019] [Accepted: 11/07/2019] [Indexed: 01/10/2023]
Abstract
Recent sociological research has raised important sociological and ethical questions about the role of financial rewards in terms of healthy volunteer involvement in clinical trials. Research suggests that it would be parochial to assume financial rewards alone are sufficient to explain repeat healthy volunteering. This paper explores other factors that might explain repeat healthy volunteering behaviours in phase I clinical drug trials. Drawing on qualitative research with healthy volunteers, the paper argues that while healthy volunteers make rational decisions to take part in drug trials, understanding how they become repeat volunteers requires considering varied relationships and networks involved. Drawing on Deleuze's concept of 'event' and 'becoming-with', the paper illustrates the relational, processual and embodied nature of trust in repeat healthy volunteer involvement in clinical drug trials. The paper concludes that repeat healthy volunteering is a constant flux of negotiating trust and mistrust. The paper contributes to sociological debates about trust and public engagement with technological innovations to illustrate trust among healthy volunteers as processual and changeable.
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Affiliation(s)
- Shadreck Mwale
- Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, BSMS Teaching Building 216, University of Sussex, Brighton, East Sussex, BN1 9PX, UK.
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Dennis F. Making problems: The inventive potential of the arts for alcohol and other drug research. ACTA ACUST UNITED AC 2019; 46:127-138. [PMID: 33408425 DOI: 10.1177/0091450919845146] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/17/2022]
Abstract
The arts and arts-based methods are rare in critical studies of alcohol and other drugs. This article explores the potential role of the arts for allowing alcohol and other drug problems to develop in more collaborative (with participants, broadly conceived) and thus more generative ways. Following turns in the field toward the performativity of alcohol and other drug realities, this article instead asks: what happens if we take the 'experimentality of social life' (Marres, Guggenheim & Wilkie, 2018) as our starting point for research rather than our object? That is to say, how can we work with our already inventive alcohol and other drug worlds to know and intervene with them in closer, more intimate ways? Through ethnographic engagement with a community theatre group for people who identify has having experiences of dependency or addiction, the article looks at how they 'set up' and 'stage' the problem they seek to research and enact through embodied, sensorial and relational modes of knowing that are created speculatively together and with the audience and environment. As we now accept that our methods in critical drug studies are entwined with the realities they make, this article intends to awaken our methodological imagination and attentiveness to the arts as the discipline that has always made things to know things, in order to enable problems to not only be known in new ways but to emerge in new ways.
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Ivsins A, Marsh S. Exploring what shapes injection and non-injection among a sample of marginalized people who use drugs. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2018; 57:72-78. [PMID: 29702394 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2018.04.006] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 07/31/2017] [Revised: 03/12/2018] [Accepted: 04/03/2018] [Indexed: 01/16/2023]
Abstract
BACKGROUND Few studies have specifically explored what influences people who use drugs to consume them in certain ways (i.e., smoking, injecting). While a great deal of research has examined the transition from non-injection to injection routes of drug administration, less is known about people who use drugs (PWUD) but have never injected or have stopped injecting. This paper draws on actor-network theory to explore what moves people to inject or not, among both people who currently smoke/sniff drugs (PWSD) and people who currently inject drugs (PWID), to better understand factors that shape/influence methods of drug consumption. METHODS Two-stage interviews (a quantitative survey followed by a qualitative interview) were conducted with 26 PWSD and 24 PWID. Interviews covered a range of topics related to drug use, including reasons for injecting drugs, never injecting, and stopping injecting. Data were analysed by drawing on actor-network theory to identify forces involved in shaping drug consumption practices. RESULTS We present three transformative drug use events to illustrate how specific methods of drug consumption are shaped by an assemblage of objects, actors, affects, spaces and processes. Rather than emphasising the role of broad socio-structural factors (i.e., poverty, drug policy) participant narratives reveal how a variety of actors, both human and non-human, assembled in unique ways produce drug consumption events that have the capacity to influence or transform drug consumption practices. CONCLUSION Actor-network theory and event analysis provide a more nuanced understanding of drug consumption practices by drawing together complex material, spatial, social and temporal aspects of drug use, which helps identify the variety of forces involved in contexts that are thought to shape substance use. By attending to events of drug consumption we can better understand how contexts shape drug use and related harms. With greater insight into the transformative capacity of drug use events, strategies may be better tailored to prevent drug use-related harms.
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Affiliation(s)
- Andrew Ivsins
- Department of Sociology, University of Victoria, 3800 Finnerty Road, Victoria, BC, V8P 5C2, Canada; Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research, University of Victoria, Technology Enterprise Facility Room 273, 2300 McKenzie Ave, Victoria, BC, V8P 5C2, Canada.
| | - Samona Marsh
- Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, 380 E Hastings St, Vancouver, BC, V6A 1P4, Canada
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Dennis F. Conceiving of addicted pleasures: A ‘modern’ paradox. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2017; 49:150-159. [DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2017.07.007] [Citation(s) in RCA: 17] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/10/2017] [Revised: 06/21/2017] [Accepted: 07/10/2017] [Indexed: 11/26/2022]
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Duncan T, Duff C, Sebar B, Lee J. 'Enjoying the kick': Locating pleasure within the drug consumption room. THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DRUG POLICY 2017; 49:92-101. [PMID: 28893455 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2017.07.005] [Citation(s) in RCA: 26] [Impact Index Per Article: 3.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/10/2017] [Revised: 06/06/2017] [Accepted: 07/10/2017] [Indexed: 12/20/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND Harm reduction policy and praxis has long struggled to accommodate the pleasures of alcohol and other drug use. Whilst scholars have consistently highlighted this struggle, how pleasure might come to practically inform the design and delivery of harm reduction policies and programs remains less clear. The present paper seeks to move beyond conceptual critiques of harm reduction's 'pleasure oversight' to more focused empirical analysis of how flows of pleasure emerge, circulate and, importantly, may be reoriented in the course of harm reduction practice. METHODS We ground our analysis in the context of detailed ethnographic research in a drug consumption room in Frankfurt, Germany. Drawing on recent strands of post-humanist thought, the paper deploys the concept of the 'consumption event' to uncover the manner in which these facilities mediate the practice and embodied experience of drug use and incite or limit bodily potentials for intoxication and pleasure. RESULTS Through the analysis, we mapped a diversity of pleasures as they emerged and circulated through events of consumption at the consumption room. Beyond the pleasurable intensities of intoxication's kick, these pleasures were expressed in a range of novel capacities, practices and drug using bodies. In each instance, pleasure could not be reduced to a simple, linear product of drug use. Rather, it arose for our participants through distinctive social and affective transformations enabled through events of consumption at the consumption room and the generative force of actors and associations of which these events were composed. CONCLUSION Our research suggests that the drug consumption room serves as a conduit through which its clients can potentially enact more pleasurable, productive and positive relations to both themselves and their drug use. Acknowledging the centrality of pleasure to client engagement with these facilities, the paper concludes by drawing out the implications of these findings for the design and delivery of consumption room services.
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Affiliation(s)
- Tristan Duncan
- School of Medicine, Griffith University, 58 Parklands Dr, Southport, QLD 4215, Australia.
| | - Cameron Duff
- Centre for People, Organisation and Work, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, 445 Swanston St, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia
| | - Bernadette Sebar
- School of Medicine, Griffith University, 58 Parklands Dr, Southport, QLD 4215, Australia
| | - Jessica Lee
- School of Medicine, Griffith University, 58 Parklands Dr, Southport, QLD 4215, Australia
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14
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Affiliation(s)
- Simon Cohn
- Department of Health Services Research & Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK
| | - Rebecca Lynch
- Department of Health Services Research & Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK
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