Literature DB >> 30541674

Drug safety testing, disposals and dealing in an English field: Exploring the operational and behavioural outcomes of the UK's first onsite 'drug checking' service.

Fiona Catherine Measham1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In a year when UK drug-related deaths and festival drug-related deaths reached their highest on record, a pilot festival drug safety testing service was introduced with the aim of reducing drug-related harm. This paper describes the operational and behavioural outcomes of this pilot and explores the relationship between drug use, supply and policing within festival grounds.
METHODS: Chemists in a temporary laboratory analysed 247 substances submitted by the public to a free, confidential testing service across four days at a UK festival in July 2016. Test results were returned to service users embedded in 230 healthcare consultations delivered to approximately 900 festival-goers (one in five drug using festival-goers) that included harm reduction advice and the opportunity to use a disposal service for further substances of concern. Consultation data were collected at point of care, matched with test results, coded and analysed using SPSS
RESULTS: Test results revealed that one in five substances was not as sold or acquired. One in five service users utilised the disposal service for further substances of concern in their possession and another one in six moderated their consumption. Two thirds of those whose sample was missold disposed of further substances, compared with under one in ten whose sample was as sold. Service users who acquired substances onsite at the festival were more than twice as likely to have been missold them as those acquired offsite, were nearly twice as likely to use the disposal service and were on average two years younger. Women were more likely to be using the drug for the first time and more likely to use the disposal service. Test results were shared with emergency services; alerts issued across site and an unanticipated feedback loop occurred to some drug suppliers.
CONCLUSION: This pilot suggests that festival-goers engage productively with onsite drug safety testing services when given the opportunity, such services can access harder-to-reach and new user groups and can play a part in reducing drug-related harm by identifying and informing service users, emergency services and offsite drug using communities about substances of concern. Disposals to the testing service for onward police destruction provide an externally corroborated measure of impact, reducing harm to the individual and others by removing such substances from site. Evidence of differential dealing onsite and its potential negative consequences has implications for future research and policing. Crown
Copyright © 2018. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Drug checking; Drug dealing; Drug safety testing; Drug use; Festivals; Harm reduction

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30541674     DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2018.11.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Drug Policy        ISSN: 0955-3959


  24 in total

1.  Adulterants and altruism: A qualitative investigation of "drug checkers" in North America.

Authors:  Joseph J Palamar; Patricia Acosta; Rachel Sutherland; Michele G Shedlin; Monica J Barratt
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2019-10-11

2.  City checking: Piloting the UK's first community-based drug safety testing (drug checking) service in 2 city centres.

Authors:  Fiona Measham
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2020-02-17       Impact factor: 4.335

3.  Use of "Lean" Among Electronic Dance Music Party Attendees.

Authors:  Joseph J Palamar
Journal:  Am J Addict       Date:  2019-04-30

4.  "We don't got that kind of time, man. We're trying to get high!": Exploring potential use of drug checking technologies among structurally vulnerable people who use drugs.

Authors:  Geoff Bardwell; Jade Boyd; Kenneth W Tupper; Thomas Kerr
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2019-07-20

5.  Trends in seizures of powders and pills containing illicit fentanyl in the United States, 2018 through 2021.

Authors:  Joseph J Palamar; Daniel Ciccarone; Caroline Rutherford; Katherine M Keyes; Thomas H Carr; Linda B Cottler
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2022-03-31       Impact factor: 4.852

6.  Fake anabolic androgenic steroids on the black market - a systematic review and meta-analysis on qualitative and quantitative analytical results found within the literature.

Authors:  Raphael Magnolini; Luis Falcato; Alessio Cremonesi; Dominique Schori; Philip Bruggmann
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2022-07-17       Impact factor: 4.135

7.  "I couldn't live with killing one of my friends or anybody": A rapid ethnographic study of drug sellers' use of drug checking.

Authors:  Alex Betsos; Jenna Valleriani; Jade Boyd; Geoff Bardwell; Thomas Kerr; Ryan McNeil
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2020-11-24

Review 8.  Drug checking at dance festivals: A review with recommendations to increase generalizability of findings.

Authors:  Joseph J Palamar; Nicole D Fitzgerald; Katherine M Keyes; Linda B Cottler
Journal:  Exp Clin Psychopharmacol       Date:  2021-02-18       Impact factor: 3.492

9.  Self-reported Subjective Effects of Analytically Confirmed New Psychoactive Substances Consumed by e-Psychonauts: Protocol for a Longitudinal Study Using a New Internet-Based Methodology.

Authors:  Marc Grifell; Guillem Mir Fuster; Mireia Ventura Vilamala; Liliana Galindo Guarín; Xoán Carbón Mallol; Carl L Hart; Víctor Pérez Sola; Francesc Colom Victoriano
Journal:  JMIR Res Protoc       Date:  2021-07-02

10.  The potential impacts of community drug checking within the overdose crisis: qualitative study exploring the perspective of prospective service users.

Authors:  Bruce Wallace; Thea van Roode; Flora Pagan; Dennis Hore; Bernadette Pauly
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2021-06-16       Impact factor: 3.295

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