|
1. |
Editor's Introduction: The Crack Epidemic Revisited |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 305-306
InciardiJamesA.,
Preview
|
PDF (1288KB)
|
|
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471655
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
2. |
The Setting for the Crack Era: Macro Forces, Micro Consequences (1960–1992) |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 307-321
DunlapEloise,
JohnsonBruceD.,
Preview
|
PDF (11010KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractThis article provides an overview of the social history leading up to the crack era, especially 1960 to the present. The central theme holds that several major macro social forces (e.g., economic decline, job loss, ghettoization, housing abandonment, homelessness) have disproportionately impacted on the inner-city economy. These forces have created micro consequences that have impacted directly on many inner-city residents and have increased levels of distress experienced by households, families, and individuals. Economic marginality has generated high levels of alcohol and other drug abuse as well as criminality, which are exemplified in this article by one inner-city household having an extensive family history exhibiting the chronic impacts of these macro forces and their micro consequences.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471656
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
3. |
Studying Crack Abusers: Strategies for Recruiting the Right Tail of an Ill-defined Population |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 323-336
LewisCarla,
JohnsonBruceD.,
GolubAndrew,
DunlapEloise,
Preview
|
PDF (8657KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractThis study attempts to better understand a limited segment of the drug-abusing population, especially individuals who repeatedly use crack and other drugs. This article addresses the methodological strategies and underlying paradigms informing the recruitment of hard-to-reach and ill-defined subpopulations of crack abusers and noncrack drug abusers. Subjects were recruited from diverse social contexts: streets or communities where most drug users do their business, arrested persons who were released, jail inmates, probationers and parolees, prison inmates, and treatment settings. A systematic comparison of subject attributes across recruitment locales and with other, similar target groups is presented. The utility and external comparability of the recruitment techniques are supported by the findings.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471657
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
4. |
The Developmental Cycle of a Drug Epidemic: The Cocaine Smoking Epidemic of 1981–1991 |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 337-348
HamidAnsley,
Preview
|
PDF (7452KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractAlthough Americans have experienced many drug epidemics, the majority of which have ended within ten years of onset, they nevertheless believed that the use of smokable cocaine, which took the popular form of crack cocaine in 1984, would grow exponentially throughout the 1990s unless it was vigorously combated. However, in 1991 it appears that crack use is in decline even in the inner-city neighborhoods where it had been most entrenched, and that the decline is due more to natural controls than to the War on Drugs. The cyclical nature of drug epidemics, as well as their progression through regular stages, was again affirmed. The cocaine-smoking epidemic of 1981–1991 (which included crack) afforded the opportunity to research it in its entirety. In this article, the advantages of recognizing the developmental cycles of drug epidemics are outlined, the most important of which concerns the future. In the terminal stage of the developmental cycle of a drug epidemic, remaining abusers play a pivotal role. If humanely treated. they may serve as deterrents to future drug use: frustrated in current drug use, however, yet insensitively treated by the wider society, they may author the next epidemic.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471658
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
5. |
From Bag Brides to Skeezers: A Historical Perspective on Sex-for-Drugs Behavior |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 349-361
GoldsteinPaulJ.,
OuelletLawrenceJ.,
FendrichMichael,
Preview
|
PDF (8241KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractThere are many ways that women support their use of crack cocaine, including sex-for-crack bartering and other forms of prostitution. Empirical studies conducted in the mid-1970s and in the mid-1980s in New York City, and in Chicago in the late 1980s to early 1990s are compared, analyzing similarities and differences between the contemporary crackprostitution scene and previous prostitution scenes. Findings suggest that the arrival of crack cocaine has directly and indirectly affected the drugs-prostitution nexus by lowering the price of sex for street prostitutes, altering the social status of cocaine, and increasing the level of social disorganization in illicit street activities, including prostitution. Barterers are shown to be the heaviest drug users, using the greatest variety of drugs, using larger amounts of drugs, and using more frequently.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471659
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
6. |
High-Risk Sex Behavior Among Young Street-Recruited Crack Cocaine Smokers in Three American Cities: An Interim Report |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 363-371
EdlinBrianR.,
IrwinKathleenL.,
LudwigDonaD.,
McCoyH.Virginia,
SerranoYolanda,
WordCarl,
BowserBenjaminP.,
FaruqueSairus,
McCoyClydeB.,
SchillingRobertF.,
HolmbergScottD.,
Preview
|
PDF (4988KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractSince crack cocaine appeared in urban areas in the United States in the mid- 1980s, reports have suggested that crack smokers may be at increased risk of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), including infection with HIV, because they have multiple sex partners, trade sex for money or drugs, and rarely use condoms. A cross-sectional survey is being conducted in urban neighborhoods in Miami, New York and San Francisco-where crack use is common—to explore these issues. Indigenous street outreach workers are recruiting men and women who are either current regular crack smokers or who have never smoked crack; each group is further stratified according to whether participants had ever injected drugs. Participants were interviewed about their sexual and drug-use practices. Overall, crack smokers, whether injectors or not, engaged in higher-risk sexual behaviors than nonsmokers, reported greater numbers of sex partners than nonsmokers, and were more likely than nonsmokers to have exchanged sex for money or drugs or to have had an STD. Differences between crack smokers and nonsmokers were generally greater among noninjectors than among injectors, and generally greater among women than among men. Condom use, although somewhat more common with paying than nonpaying partners, was infrequent overall. Most of the subjects had not been in substance abuse treatment in the preceding 12 months, and a majority had never been in substance abuse treatment Education and prevention programs specifically targeted at crack smokers not currently in substance abuse treatment are needed to reach these high-risk persons.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471660
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
7. |
Crack Cocaine Use and Sexual Activity in Miami, Florida |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 373-380
WeatherbyNormanL.,
ShultzJamesM.,
ChitwoodDaleD.,
McCoyH.Virginia,
McCoyClydeB.,
LudwigDonaD.,
EdlinBrianR.,
Preview
|
PDF (3913KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractData are analyzed from the Multicenter Study of Crack Cocaine and HIV Infection in Miami, Florida, examining interrelationships among use of crack cocaine, use of other drugs, sexual activity, and exchange of sex for money and drugs. This study was designed to recruit two groups of approximately equal size: persons who reported current use of crack cocaine three or more times per week, and those who had never used crack. Participants (N=641) were recruited in Miami. Participants' median age for first use of crack cocaine was higher than for use of alcohol, marijuana or powdered cocaine. It was also higher than participants' ages at first sexual activity, and somewhat higher than the median age for reporting initiation of trading sex for money or drugs. The median age of first crack use was lower among younger participants, suggesting that crack use in older participants followed quickly upon availability of the drug. Crack users reported reduced desire for sex and diminished ability to have sex after smoking crack. However, crack use was associated with increased sexual activity, trading sex for money or drugs, and sex with multiple partners. Participants who traded sex for money or drugs (traders) reported higher rates of condom use than nontraders; however, neither traders nor non traders reported rates of condom use sufficient to substantially reduce the transmission of sexually transmitted diseases and HIV infection.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471661
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
8. |
Women Who Use Cocaine Too Much: Smoking Crack vs. Snorting Cocaine |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 381-388
MurphySheigla,
RosenbaumMarsha,
Preview
|
PDF (5475KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractMonique (an African-American 19-year-o1d) and Becky (a white 21-year-old) were interviewed as part of a NIDA-funded study of women and cocaine. Although they were not necessarily typical, they do illustrate some of the differences among women who use cocaine. Despite the fact that they were close in age and both used cocaine, their scenarios and outcomes were very different, as one was a white middle-class woman and the other was an underclass woman of Color. The argument presented in this article is that it is not simply substance use that frames the experiences of women who use cocaine too much, but the social class mediated by gender and race. Through these life histories, the lives of these women are examined prior to cocaine use. Then the differential processes of initiation into and continuation of cocaine are described and analyzed, followed by a discussion of their lives after cocaine use.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471662
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
9. |
A Gender Comparison of Health Status Among Users of Crack Cocaine |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 389-397
McCoyH.Virginia,
MilesChristine,
Preview
|
PDF (4693KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractThis study examines a population of inner-city crack cocaine users in Miami, Florida. Many study participants were also injection drug users; others were the sexual partners of injection drug users. In general, the self-reported health status of the study population was good, but men perceived their health in a more positive light than did women. HIV-seronegative men were most likely to report excellent or good health, and seropositive women reported the greatest incidence of poor health, regardless of the amount of crack use. Serostatus was statistically significant for women but not for men. Pneumonia was reported more frequently by women, while hepatitis and tuberculosis were reported more frequently by men. There was a significant gender difference in reported endocarditis among light users of crack, with more women that men reporting a history of endocarditis. Among sexually transmitted diseases, men reported more gonorrhea and women reported more syphilis. These gender differences were statistically significant only for heavy users of crack. A gender difference was evident in the HIV seropositivity rates, with 25.7% of men and 32.2% of women testing positive for antibodies to HlV. While this difference held true when frequency of crack use was controlled, the difference was not statistically significant. Women were significantly more likely than men to trade sex for drugs and/or money. Women who were heavy crack users traded most often and would be expected to be at correspondingly increased risk for HIV infection or transmission.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471663
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
10. |
Cocaine Use Patterns and Overdose |
|
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
Volume 24,
Issue 4,
1992,
Page 399-410
PottiegerAnneE.,
TressellPatriciaA.,
InciardiJamesA.,
RosalesTeriA.,
Preview
|
PDF (7726KB)
|
|
摘要:
AbstractThe question of how cocaine overdoses are related to preferred routes of cocaine administration and other aspects of cocaine use patterns is sufficiently complex that very little information is available on it. Even the most extensive information on cocaine overdoses, that of the Drug Abuse Warning Network, is severely limited for purposes of examining this topic. Findings are presented from a 1988–1990 study of a purposive but demographically diverse sample of 699 crack and other cocaine users in Miami, 349 of them interviewed in residential treatment and 350 interviewed on the street. Among these respondents: a history of cocaine overdose is extremely common; overdose episodes do not commonly motivate treatment entry and in some populations are relatively unlikely to result in an emergency room visit; cocaine overdose is less associated with crack smoking than with snorting or intravenous (IV) use, whereas IV use is especially likely to result in overdose; and the street and treatment samples are strikingly different in regard to drug use patterns, overdose history, changes some users made to use patterns as a result of overdose experiences, and reasons given by other users for not making such changes.
ISSN:0279-1072
DOI:10.1080/02791072.1992.10471664
出版商:Taylor&Francis Group
年代:1992
数据来源: Taylor
|
|