Literature DB >> 10369443

Doing a shotgun: a drug use practice and its relationship to sexual behaviors and infection risk.

D C Perlman1, A R Henman, L Kochems, D Paone, N Salomon, D C Des Jarlais.   

Abstract

There has been a rise in the frequency with which inhalational routes such as smoking are used for illicit drug use. A growing population of new inhalational drug users augments the pool of individuals at risk for transition to injection drug use. Further, illicit drug smoking has been implicated in the transmission of a variety of pathogens by the respiratory route, and crack smoking has been associated with an increased risk of HIV infection, particularly through the exchange of high-risk sex for drugs. Shotguns are an illicit drug smoking practice in which smoked drugs are exhaled or blown by one user into the mouth of another user. We conducted a series of ethnographic observations to attempt to characterize more fully the practice of shotgunning, the range of associated behaviors, and the settings and contexts in which this practice occurs. Shotguns may be seen as a form of drug use which has close ties to sexual behaviors, and which has both pragmatic and interpersonal motivations, combining in a single phenomenon the potential direct and indirect risk of disease transmission by sexual, blood borne and respiratory routes. These data support the need to develop and evaluate comprehensive risk reduction interventions, which take into consideration the relationships between interpersonal and sexual behaviors and specific forms of drug use.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10369443     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(98)00448-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  5 in total

1.  Crack use as a public health problem in Canada: call for an evaluation of 'safer crack use kits'.

Authors:  Emma Haydon; Benedikt Fischer
Journal:  Can J Public Health       Date:  2005 May-Jun

2.  Kinky Sex Gone Wrong: Legal Prosecutions Concerning Consent, Age Play, and Death via BDSM.

Authors:  Elisabeth Sheff
Journal:  Arch Sex Behav       Date:  2021-03-01

3.  "Shotgunning" in a population of patients with severe mental illness and comorbid substance use disorders.

Authors:  Christopher Welsh; Richard Goldberg; Stephanie Tapscott; Deborah Medoff; Stanley Rosenberg; Lisa Dixon
Journal:  Am J Addict       Date:  2012 Mar-Apr

4.  High prevalence of HIV, HCV and tuberculosis and associated risk behaviours among new entrants of methadone maintenance treatment clinics in Guangdong Province, China.

Authors:  Lei Zhang; Di Zhang; Wen Chen; Xia Zou; Li Ling
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-10-08       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Evaluating the impact of Mexico's drug policy reforms on people who inject drugs in Tijuana, B.C., Mexico, and San Diego, CA, United States: a binational mixed methods research agenda.

Authors:  Angela M Robertson; Richard S Garfein; Karla D Wagner; Sanjay R Mehta; Carlos Magis-Rodriguez; Jazmine Cuevas-Mota; Patricia Gonzalez Moreno-Zuniga; Steffanie A Strathdee
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2014-02-12
  5 in total

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