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1.
Glob Public Health ; 17(12): 3654-3669, 2022 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36692903

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has created an unprecedented natural experiment in drug policy, treatment delivery, and harm reduction strategies by exposing wide variation in public health infrastructures and social safety nets around the world. Using qualitative data including ethnographic methods, questionnaires, and semi-structured interviews with people who use drugs (PWUD) and Delphi-method with experts from field sites spanning 13 different countries, this paper compares national responses to substance use during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Field data was collected by the Substance Use x COVID-19 (SU x COVID) Data Collaborative, an international network of social scientists, public health scientists, and community health practitioners convened to identify and contextualise health service delivery models and social protections that influence the health and wellbeing of PWUD during COVID-19. Findings suggest that countries with stronger social welfare systems pre-COVID introduced durable interventions targeting structural drivers of health. Countries with fragmented social service infrastructures implemented temporary initiatives for PWUD led by non-governmental organisations. The paper summarises the most successful early pandemic responses seen across countries and ends by calling for greater systemic investments in social protections for PWUD, diversion away from criminal-legal systems toward health interventions, and integrated harm reduction, treatment and recovery supports for PWUD.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Drug Users , Substance-Related Disorders , Humans , Pandemics , COVID-19/epidemiology , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy , Public Policy , Harm Reduction
2.
Glob Public Health ; 15(5): 691-703, 2020 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31825719

ABSTRACT

The Dominican Republic is thought to have significant epidemics of illicit drug use but lacks surveillance and formal analyses of the policy context of drug prevention and treatment services. We conducted an institutional ethnography of 15 drug service organisations in Santo Domingo and Boca Chica, Dominican Republic, to explore barriers and resources for drug abuse prevention and treatment. Here, we present a typology of drug service organisations based on their services, methods, and approach. We then draw on interviews with representatives of drug service institutions to describe the primary barriers to drug treatment and prevention services for drug users. We conclude with a focus on the policy priorities that could improve the conditions of health care for marginalised drug users in the Dominican Republic.


Subject(s)
Anthropology, Cultural , Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy , Criminal Law , Dominican Republic , Health Policy , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Morals , Observation , Qualitative Research , Religion , Substance Abuse Treatment Centers
3.
Med Anthropol Q ; 32(4): 498-519, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29665064

ABSTRACT

In this article, we use syndemic theory to examine socio-structural factors that result in heightened vulnerability to HIV infection and drug addiction among Dominican deportees who survive post-deportation through informal tourism labor. Through an ongoing NIDA-funded ethnographic study of the syndemic of HIV and problematic drug use among men involved in tourism labor in the Dominican Republic, we argue that the legal and political-economic context of the global deportation regime contributes to structural vulnerabilities among deportees in the Dominican Republic, most of whom are men with histories of incarceration in the United States and/or Puerto Rico. While Dominican laws and institutional practices work conjointly with foreign policies to reconfigure non-criminal deportees as hardened criminals unworthy of full citizenship rights, the informal tourism economy provides one of the few absorption points for male deportee labor, linking the deportation regime directly to the Caribbean tourism industry.


Subject(s)
Stress, Psychological , Transients and Migrants/psychology , Travel , Vulnerable Populations/psychology , Adult , Anthropology, Medical , Dominican Republic , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
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