Literature DB >> 33955586

Drug fatalities and treatment fatalism: Complicating the ageing cohort theory.

Fay Dennis1.   

Abstract

Deaths related to drug 'misuse' remain at an all-time high in the United Kingdom (UK). Older heroin consumers are particularly at risk, with the highest rates of deaths among people aged 40-49 and the steepest rises in the over-fifty age bracket. Accordingly, a popular theory for the UK's increase in drug-related deaths, made by the government, and propelled in the media, is that there is an ageing cohort of heroin users with age-related health complications predisposing them to an overdose. However, drawing on in-depth interviews with those people deemed to be most at risk, this article works to complicate this theory, with participants citing a shift in (a) experience and responsibility, (b) route of administration, (c) desired effects, (d) acceptance of their drug use and 'user' status and (e) valuing health. Disrupting age as a given risk factor, this article turns attention away from the individual and these 'natural' processes to what participants describe as a singular, punitive, and inflexible treatment system and its intersecting structures. Approaching life and death as a matter of sociomaterial 'mattering', this article rethinks a reductionist, causal link between age and drug-related death with a treatment despondency and fatalism that could prove fatal.
© 2021 The Author. Sociology of Health & Illness published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Foundation for SHIL (SHIL).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Haraway; care; drug treatment; drug-related deaths; heroin; mattering; response-ability

Year:  2021        PMID: 33955586      PMCID: PMC7611256          DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.13278

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  17 in total

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5.  Take-home naloxone and the politics of care.

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6.  Materialising drugged pleasures: Practice, politics, care.

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Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2017-11

7.  Fatal opioid poisoning: a counterfactual model to estimate the preventive effect of treatment for opioid use disorder in England.

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Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2015-06-23       Impact factor: 6.526

8.  Distributing foil from needle and syringe programmes (NSPs) to promote transitions from heroin injecting to chasing: an evaluation.

Authors:  Rachael Pizzey; Neil Hunt
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2008-07-21

9.  SMOKE IT! Promoting a change of opiate consumption pattern - from injecting to inhaling.

Authors:  Heino Johann Stöver; Dirk Schäffer
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2014-06-27

10.  Impact of treatment for opioid dependence on fatal drug-related poisoning: a national cohort study in England.

Authors:  Matthias Pierce; Sheila M Bird; Matthew Hickman; John Marsden; Graham Dunn; Andrew Jones; Tim Millar
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2015-11-25       Impact factor: 6.526

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  1 in total

1.  "I don't go to funerals anymore": how people who use opioids grieve drug-related death in the US overdose epidemic.

Authors:  Allison V Schlosser; Lee D Hoffer
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2022-10-01
  1 in total

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