The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs

Background: Growing awareness of the role social, structural, and environmental factors in producing harm among people who inject drugs (IDU) has underscored the need for safer environment interventions. However, emerging evidence underscores how current interventions are insufficient to bring about...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McNeil, Ryan
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44849
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-44849
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-448492018-01-05T17:26:49Z The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs McNeil, Ryan Background: Growing awareness of the role social, structural, and environmental factors in producing harm among people who inject drugs (IDU) has underscored the need for safer environment interventions. However, emerging evidence underscores how current interventions are insufficient to bring about more significant reductions in drug-related harm. To date, there have been few studies examining how contextual forces operating within the wider risk environment shape the socio-spatial relations of IDU in relation to safer environment interventions and health care settings. This dissertation seeks to address this gap by examining the socio-spatial dynamics within three settings in Vancouver, Canada: the street-based drug scene; an ‘unsanctioned’ supervised drug consumption room (DCR); and, hospitals. Methods: This dissertation used an ethno-epidemiological approach, and the individual studies were undertaken in connection with ongoing prospective cohort studies of current and former drug users. Ethnographic fieldwork, including participant-observation, in-depth interviews and qualitative mapping exercises, sought to characterize the socio-spatial relations of IDU in relation to the abovementioned settings. Results: Study findings underscored how contextual forces shaped the socio-spatial relations of IDU, and thus access to and engagement with safer environment interventions and hospital settings. First, findings highlighted the role of gendered power relations within the street-based drug scene in shaping the spatial practices of highly vulnerable IDU, and constraining their access to a supervised injection facility. Second, findings demonstrated how, by permitting assisted injections, the DCR created a ‘legitimate place’ for IDU who require help injecting, and enabled them to enact risk reduction. Finally, social (e.g., stigmatization) and structural (e.g., abstinence-based drug policies) factors within hospital settings were found to produce considerable suffering (e.g., inadequate pain management) and contribute to discharges from hospital against medical advice. Conclusions: The collective findings of this dissertation demonstrate how the socio-spatial relations of IDU, and the contextual forces that impact upon them, are key determinants of drug-related harm and access to interventions and hospital services. These findings point to the need to modify and scale up existing safer environment interventions, and expand these into hospital settings, to mitigate the impacts of contextual forces on IDU and better address their health needs. Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies Graduate 2013-08-20T21:21:30Z 2013-08-20T21:21:30Z 2013 2013-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44849 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Downtown-Eastside (Vancouver, B.C.) University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Background: Growing awareness of the role social, structural, and environmental factors in producing harm among people who inject drugs (IDU) has underscored the need for safer environment interventions. However, emerging evidence underscores how current interventions are insufficient to bring about more significant reductions in drug-related harm. To date, there have been few studies examining how contextual forces operating within the wider risk environment shape the socio-spatial relations of IDU in relation to safer environment interventions and health care settings. This dissertation seeks to address this gap by examining the socio-spatial dynamics within three settings in Vancouver, Canada: the street-based drug scene; an ‘unsanctioned’ supervised drug consumption room (DCR); and, hospitals. Methods: This dissertation used an ethno-epidemiological approach, and the individual studies were undertaken in connection with ongoing prospective cohort studies of current and former drug users. Ethnographic fieldwork, including participant-observation, in-depth interviews and qualitative mapping exercises, sought to characterize the socio-spatial relations of IDU in relation to the abovementioned settings. Results: Study findings underscored how contextual forces shaped the socio-spatial relations of IDU, and thus access to and engagement with safer environment interventions and hospital settings. First, findings highlighted the role of gendered power relations within the street-based drug scene in shaping the spatial practices of highly vulnerable IDU, and constraining their access to a supervised injection facility. Second, findings demonstrated how, by permitting assisted injections, the DCR created a ‘legitimate place’ for IDU who require help injecting, and enabled them to enact risk reduction. Finally, social (e.g., stigmatization) and structural (e.g., abstinence-based drug policies) factors within hospital settings were found to produce considerable suffering (e.g., inadequate pain management) and contribute to discharges from hospital against medical advice. Conclusions: The collective findings of this dissertation demonstrate how the socio-spatial relations of IDU, and the contextual forces that impact upon them, are key determinants of drug-related harm and access to interventions and hospital services. These findings point to the need to modify and scale up existing safer environment interventions, and expand these into hospital settings, to mitigate the impacts of contextual forces on IDU and better address their health needs. === Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies === Graduate
author McNeil, Ryan
spellingShingle McNeil, Ryan
The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs
author_facet McNeil, Ryan
author_sort McNeil, Ryan
title The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs
title_short The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs
title_full The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs
title_fullStr The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs
title_full_unstemmed The impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs
title_sort impact of environmental factors on risk, harm, and health care access among people who inject drugs
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/44849
work_keys_str_mv AT mcneilryan theimpactofenvironmentalfactorsonriskharmandhealthcareaccessamongpeoplewhoinjectdrugs
AT mcneilryan impactofenvironmentalfactorsonriskharmandhealthcareaccessamongpeoplewhoinjectdrugs
_version_ 1718583925398306816