» Articles » PMID: 15899325

The Impact of a Police Drug Crackdown on Drug Injectors' Ability to Practice Harm Reduction: a Qualitative Study

Overview
Journal Soc Sci Med
Date 2005 May 19
PMID 15899325
Citations 131
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This paper employs qualitative methods to explore the ramifications of a police drug crackdown on drug injectors' ability to practice harm reduction. Between August and December 2000, we conducted open-ended interviews with 40 illicit-drug-injecting residents of a New York City police precinct undergoing a crackdown. Interview topics included participants' experiences with police in the precinct and their drug use practices. Grounded theory methods were used to analyze resulting transcripts. Because place emerged as a salient analytic category, we also drew on elements of social geography to interpret results. The analysis suggests that particular crackdown tactics, notably frequent police searches of participants' bodies and elevated surveillance of the precinct's public spaces, reconfigured participants' experiences of their bodies and the public spaces comprising the precinct in ways that adversely affected their capacity to engage in harm reduction. Frequent police searches, for example, discouraged participants from carrying the injection equipment they needed to ensure that they could inject with a sterile syringe. Constant monitoring of local public spaces made it difficult for homeless women and men to inject safely. Simultaneously, participants expressed support for police actions that reduced public drug activity. Given these findings, we recommend the implementation of strategies, designed by partnerships of community groups and governmental and non-governmental organizations, which reduce public drug activity without imperiling injectors' health. Possible strategies include improving access to treatment and establishing safe injection spaces.

Citing Articles

"We're Not Gonna Aid You in Shooting Up": Stigma's Relationship to Harm Reduction in People Who Inject Drugs.

Weger R, Weinstock N, Jawa R, Deanna Wilson J J Gen Intern Med. 2024; .

PMID: 39448507 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-024-09129-3.


The relationship between felt stigma and non-fatal overdose among rural people who use drugs.

Sibley A, Klein E, Cooper H, Livingston 3rd M, Baker R, Walters S Harm Reduct J. 2024; 21(1):77.

PMID: 38582851 PMC: 10998326. DOI: 10.1186/s12954-024-00988-x.


Differences in Substance Use and Harm Reduction Practices by Race and Ethnicity: Rhode Island Harm Reduction Surveillance System, 2021-2022.

Rodriguez M, McKenzie M, McKee H, Ledingham E, John K, Koziol J J Public Health Manag Pract. 2023; 30(2):E84-E93.

PMID: 38153310 PMC: 10872563. DOI: 10.1097/PHH.0000000000001863.


HIV and Hepatitis C Among People Who Inject Drugs in Memphis, Tennessee: an Intersectional Risk Environment Analysis of the Social Determinants of Health.

Flath N, Marr J, Sizemore L, Pichon L, Brantley M J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2023; 12(1):361-373.

PMID: 38066407 DOI: 10.1007/s40615-023-01878-x.


Socioeconomic and racial/ethnic spatial polarization and incarceration among people who inject drugs in 19 US metropolitan areas, 2015.

Wise A, Kianian B, Chang H, Linton S, Wolfe M, Smith J SSM Popul Health. 2023; 23:101486.

PMID: 37635990 PMC: 10448199. DOI: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2023.101486.