Drug injecting in public places is associated with elevated health harm among injecting drug users (IDUs). Yet there is little research exploring the lived experience of injecting in public places, and specifically, a need to explore the interplay of public injecting environments, risk practices and social marginalisation. We undertook 49 qualitative interviews with IDUs in South Wales, UK, in six locations. Analyses focused on injectors' narratives of injecting in public places and risk identity. Findings show how the lived experience of public injecting feeds a pervasive sense of risk and 'otherness' among street injectors, in which public injecting environments act as contextual amplifiers of social marginalisation. Injecting in public p...
This paper examines the stigma of injecting drug use as an underlying factor in the poor health stat...
This paper problematises the emergence and functioning of the recent phenomenon of ‘supervised injec...
AIM: Recognizing the dearth of qualitative research on hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection associated ...
BACKGROUND: One key structural dimension in the distribution of drug-related harm associated with in...
The settings where drugs are injected represent a crucial dimension in the social structural product...
Abstract Background Public injecting of recreational drugs has been documented in a number of cities...
Qualitative research which describes the social behaviour of illicit drug users has a key role to pl...
This paper presents, qualitative findings relating to specific environments hitherto unrecognised as...
Introduction and Aims. Crack cocaine injecting is associated with a higher prevalence of sharing beh...
Abstract Background Injection drug users (IDU) commonly seek manual assistance with illicit drug inj...
Introduction and Aims. Crack cocaine injecting is associated with a higher prevalence of sharing beh...
This paper provides a comparative study of qualitative research concerning drug-related litter in co...
Background: Growing awareness of the role social, structural, and environmental factors in producing...
This study examines the prevalence of public injecting and willingness to use drug consumption rooms...
Ecological approaches to addressing injection-related risk seek to reduce drug-related harm by ident...
This paper examines the stigma of injecting drug use as an underlying factor in the poor health stat...
This paper problematises the emergence and functioning of the recent phenomenon of ‘supervised injec...
AIM: Recognizing the dearth of qualitative research on hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection associated ...
BACKGROUND: One key structural dimension in the distribution of drug-related harm associated with in...
The settings where drugs are injected represent a crucial dimension in the social structural product...
Abstract Background Public injecting of recreational drugs has been documented in a number of cities...
Qualitative research which describes the social behaviour of illicit drug users has a key role to pl...
This paper presents, qualitative findings relating to specific environments hitherto unrecognised as...
Introduction and Aims. Crack cocaine injecting is associated with a higher prevalence of sharing beh...
Abstract Background Injection drug users (IDU) commonly seek manual assistance with illicit drug inj...
Introduction and Aims. Crack cocaine injecting is associated with a higher prevalence of sharing beh...
This paper provides a comparative study of qualitative research concerning drug-related litter in co...
Background: Growing awareness of the role social, structural, and environmental factors in producing...
This study examines the prevalence of public injecting and willingness to use drug consumption rooms...
Ecological approaches to addressing injection-related risk seek to reduce drug-related harm by ident...
This paper examines the stigma of injecting drug use as an underlying factor in the poor health stat...
This paper problematises the emergence and functioning of the recent phenomenon of ‘supervised injec...
AIM: Recognizing the dearth of qualitative research on hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection associated ...