4.6 Article

Safety in solitude? Competing risks and drivers of solitary drug use among women who inject drugs and implications for overdose detection

Journal

ADDICTION
Volume 118, Issue 5, Pages 847-854

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/add.16103

Keywords

Drug overdose; injection drug use; opioids; qualitative research; solitary drug use; substance use; using drugs alone

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This study examined the reasons and strategies for solitary drug use among women who inject drugs. Despite a preference for accompanied drug use, women frequently engaged in solitary drug use due to constraints of their physical and social environments, and took steps to reduce the risk of overdose.
Background and aimsSolitary drug use (SDU) can amplify risks of fatal overdose. We examined competing risks and drivers of SDU, as well as harm reduction strategies implemented during SDU episodes, among women who inject drugs (WWID). DesignA cross-sectional qualitative study, including telephone and face-to-face in-depth interviews. SettingBaltimore City, MD, USA. ParticipantsTwenty-seven WWID (mean age = 39 years, 67% white, 74% injected drugs daily) recruited via outreach and street intercept (April-September 2021). MeasurementsInterviews explored the physical (i.e. indoor/private, outdoor/public) and social (i.e. alone, accompanied) risk environments in which drug use occurred. Guided by the principles of emergent design, we used thematic analysis to interrogate textual data, illuminating women's preferences/motivations for SDU and strategies for minimizing overdose risks when using alone. FindingsMany participants reported experiences with SDU, despite expressed preferences for accompanied drug use. SDU motivations clustered around three primary drivers: (1) avoiding opioid withdrawal, (2) preferences for privacy when using drugs and (3) safety concerns, including threats of violence. Participants nevertheless acknowledged the dangers of SDU and, at times, took steps to mitigate overdose risk, including naloxone possession, communicating to peers when using alone ('spotting') and using drugs in public spaces. ConclusionsWWID appear to engage frequently in SDU due to constraints of the physical and social environments in which they use drugs. They express a preference for accompanied drug use in most cases and report implementing strategies to mitigate their overdose risk, especially when using drugs alone.

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