New Drugs on the Street

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A01=Merrill Singer
adolescent risk behaviors
Aid Risk Assessment
Author_Merrill Singer
Category=JBS
Category=JKSN
city
club
Club Drugs
consumption
council
Dawn
Dawn Report
Delinquent Behavior
Downtown Clubs
Drug Monitoring Systems
Ecstasy Users
ED Rate
Embalming Fluid
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic drug use patterns
Fluid Mixture
Haitian Youth
harm reduction strategies
health
hispanic
Hispanic Health Council
illicit
Illicit Consumption
merrill
minority health disparities
NA
patterns
psychotropic substance epidemiology
Puerto Rican Female
Puerto Rican Male
qualitative drug research
singer
SPSS File
Street Drug
Street Drug Scene
Suburban High School Students
THC.
urban substance abuse
VIP
VIP Room
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780789030511
  • Weight: 280g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Learn the public health implications of shifting drug-related risks among the inner city poor

Inner city drug use behavior shifts and changes, leaving past drug treatment programs, drug prevention efforts, health care provisions for drug users, and social service practice unprepared to effectively respond. New Drugs on the Street: Changing Inner City Patterns of Illicit Consumption tackles this problem by presenting the latest ethnographic and epidemiological studies of emerging and changing drug use behaviors in the inner city. This one-of-a-kind resource provides the latest research to help readers reconceptualize ways to think about today’s drug use to more effectively address the growing problem.

Unless public health and social service professionals keep in step with the shifting patterns of drug behaviors, drug use epidemics will inevitably unfold. New Drugs on the Street reveals the latest drug use practices of the poor in the inner city, with a concentration on the research in African-American and Latino populations. Each chapter gives an in-depth look at the use of various psychotropic drugs most recently gaining popularity, along with the surprising reemergence of PCP. The rampant use of ecstasy in the rave scene is explored, along with the effects of its heavy use, its after-effects, the likelihood of poly-drug mixing, and dangerous sex risk behaviors. Urban youth drug networking is examined in detail. The alarming use of embalming fluid mixtures is discussed, along with the disturbing public health implications of its use. The illicit use of narcotics analgesics (NA) like Vicodin and other pain killers is also explored, including the unclear association between NA use and Hepatitis C. A final chapter presents the latest information on Haitian youth and young adults in Miami, Florida, with ethnographic background to illustrate the reasons for drug use in this and other ethnic minorities. This valuable source is extensively referenced and includes several helpful tables to clarify research data.

New Drugs on the Street examines:

  • ecstasy
  • diverted pharmaceutical painkillers
  • PCP
  • embalming fluid
  • narcotics analgesics (NA)
  • drug use dynamics
  • the changing street drug scene
  • new drug combinations
  • new drug-involved populations

New Drugs on the Street reveals the nature and direction of the latest drug use and is essential reading for health professionals in the health social sciences, public health, nursing, and substance abuse fields that deal with low income, ethnic minority, and inner city populations.

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