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Temporal and Social Contexts of Heroin‐Using Populations An Illustration of the Snowball Sampling Technique

 

作者: CHARLES KAPLAN,   DIRK KORF,   CLAIRE STERK,  

 

期刊: The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease  (OVID Available online 1987)
卷期: Volume 175, issue 9  

页码: 566-574

 

ISSN:0022-3018

 

年代: 1987

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Snowball sampling is a method that has been used in the social sciences to study sensitive topics, rare traits, personal networks, and social relationships. The method involves the selection of samples utilizing “insider” knowledge and referral chains among subjects who possess common traits that are of research interest. It is especially useful in generating samples for which clinical sampling frames may be difficult to obtain or are biased in some way. In this paper, snowball samples of heroin users in two Dutch cities have been analyzed for the purpose of providig descriptions and limited inferences about the temporal and social contexts of their lifestyles. Two distinct heroin-using populations have been discovered who are distinguished by their life cycle stage. Significant contextual explanations have been found involving the passage from adolescent peer group to criminal occupation, the functioning of network “knots” and “outcroppings,” and the frequency of social contct. It is suggested that the snowball sampling method may have utility in studying the temporal and social contexts of other populations of clinical interest.

 

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