Opioid use and sexual violence among drug-using young adults in NYC
NYU study looks at sexual violence occurring while participants were using drugs
2015-08-04
(Press-News.org) The nonmedical use of prescription opioids (POs) has become an area of increasing public health concern in the United States and rates of use are particularly high among young adults. In the past decade, an emerging "epidemic" of nonmedical PO use has been reported. Among young adults, self-reported use is 11% and overdose deaths involving POs now exceed deaths involving heroin and cocaine combined. Sexual violence is also a serious problem in the United States receiving increased national attention, and the relationship between substance use and sexual violence is well supported in the literature.
Despite the importance of these problems, there is a dearth of research on sexual violence within the context of drug use among young adult opioid users. Now, a mixed methods study, "Sexual Violence in the Context of Drug Use among Young Adult Opioid Users in New York City," published in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, explores young adult opioid users' experiences of sexual violence as it relates to their drug use.
Pedro Mateu-Gelabert, PhD, Principal Investigator at NDRI and affiliate of New York University's Center for Drug Use and HIV Research (CDUHR), sought to identify the potential role of drug use in increasing risk of sexual violence among young adult opioid users in New York City, and to identify the specific social and contextual factors surrounding this group's experiences of sexual violence.
"Participants reported experiencing frequent incidents of sexual violence as well as knowing many peers who had similar experiences," said Mateu-Gelabert. "Many participants described negative sexual perceptions ascribed to opioid users and their own internalized stigma. They also reported exchanges of sex for drugs or money that increased their risk for sexual violence. We found that the drug-using context facilitated victimization of users who were unconscious or semi-conscious as a result of using drugs."
One hundred and sixty-four young adults (ages 18-29) who reported lifetime heroin and/or nonmedical PO use completed structured assessments that inquired about their drug use and sexual behavior and included questions specific to sexual violence. The researchers noted a striking finding -- 41% of females and 11% of males reported being forced to have sex without their consent while they were using drugs. The research also found that there was a quid pro quo expectation surrounding sex and drug use. In the structured interviews, 57% of participants reported having been in situations in which they felt that someone expected them to have sex because they were using drugs together. Forty-nine percent of males and 73% of females reported this happening at least once.
"When drugs were provided free of cost to potential partners, there was an expectation that those receiving the drugs would provide sexual favors in return," notes Lauren Jessell, LMSW, lead author of the paper. "Many users described fulfilling these implicit quid pro quo expectations with mostly men who have sex with men (MSM) and female users providing sexual favors to males who provided them with drugs."
Participants were at increased risk for sexual victimization when these expectations were unmet and when those seeking sex did not receive the sexual favors from drug users they felt entitled to. These findings describe a social setting in which the use of opioids and other drugs is conducive to sexual violence. Service providers and educators should address and challenge sexual coercion in the context of drug exchanges and the negative sexual characteristics assigned to drug users.
"The drug using context described by the young adult opioid users in our study - most of whom initiated opioid use as teens with the nonmedical use of POs - appears to facilitate sexual violence," said Mateu-Gelabert. "This suggests that prevention efforts should not only target the general public, but opioid and other drug users as well, with the message that sexual violence is never okay, regardless of how high a user might be. Our hope is that this work will contribute to the growing national conversation on sexual violence."
INFORMATION:
Acknowledgements: The project described was supported by Award Number R01DA035146 and #P30DA011041 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the NIDA or the NIH.
Researcher Affiliations: Lauren Jessell, LMSW 1; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert, PhD 1; Honoria Guarino, PhD1; Sheila P.; Vakharia, LMSW, PhD2; Cassandra Syckes, MA1; Elizabeth Goodbody, BA1; Kelly V. Ruggles, PhD1,3; Sam Friedman, PhD1
1National Development & Research Institutes, Inc., New York, USA
2Long Island University, Brooklyn, NY, USA
3New York University Medical Center, Department of Population Health, New York City, USA
About CDUHR
The mission of the Center for Drug Use and HIV Research (CDUHR) is to end the HIV and HCV epidemics in drug using populations and their communities by conducting transdisciplinary research and disseminating its findings to inform programmatic, policy, and grass roots initiatives at the local, state, national and global levels. CDUHR is a Core Center of Excellence funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (Grant #P30 DA011041). It is the first center for the socio-behavioral study of substance use and HIV in the United States and is located at the New York University College of Nursing. For more information, visit http://www.cduhr.org.
About New York University College of Nursing
NYU College of Nursing is a global leader in nursing education, research, and practice. It offers a Bachelor of Science in Nursing, a Master of Science and Post-Master's Certificate Programs, a Doctor of Philosophy in Research Theory and Development, and a Doctor of Nursing Practice degree. For more information, visit https://nursing.nyu.edu.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2015-08-04
Irvine, Calif., Aug. 4, 2015 - Stacked in gravity-defying arrangements in the western San Bernardino Mountains, near the San Andreas Fault, granite boulders that should have been toppled by earthquakes long ago resolutely remain. In exploring why these rocks still stand, researchers have uncovered connections between Southern California's San Jacinto and San Andreas faults that could change how the region plans for future earthquakes.
In a study to be published online Aug. 5 in Seismological Research Letters, Lisa Grant Ludwig, associate professor of public health at ...
2015-08-04
SAN FRANCISCO-- Stacked in gravity-defying arrangements in the western San Bernardino Mountains, granite boulders that should have been toppled long ago by earthquakes are maintaining a stubborn if precarious balance. In puzzling out why these rocks still stand, researchers have uncovered connections between Southern California's San Jacinto and San Andreas faults that could change how the region plans for future earthquakes.
In their study published online August 5 in Seismological Research Letters (SRL), Lisa Grant Ludwig of University of California, Irvine and colleagues ...
2015-08-04
While cognitive abilities naturally diminish as part of the normal aging process, it may be possible to take a bite out of this expected decline.
Eating a group of specific foods known as the MIND diet may slow cognitive decline among aging adults, even when the person is not at risk of developing Alzheimer's disease, according to researchers at Rush University Medical Center. This finding is in addition to a previous study by the research team that found that the MIND diet may reduce a person's risk in developing Alzheimer's disease.
The recent study shows that older ...
2015-08-04
Los Angeles, CA (August 4, 2015) The Journal of Endovascular Therapy (JEVT), official publication of the INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY OF ENDOVASCULAR SPECIALISTS (ISES), announces that is it today publishing the latest update of the Inter-Society Consensus for the Management of Peripheral Arterial Disease (TASC II),1 an internationally recognized set of guidelines for the management of patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD). JEVT is a SAGE journal.
Originally published in 2000, the TASC document represents the collaboration of international vascular specialties involved ...
2015-08-04
Washington, DC - August 4, 2015 - The pathogen, Listeria monocytogenes grows on refrigerated smoked salmon by way of different metabolic pathways from those it uses when growing on laboratory media. The research could lead to reduced incidences of food-borne illness and death, said principal investigator Teresa Bergholz, PhD. The research appears July 24 in Applied and Environmental Microbiology, a journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
In the study, the investigators showed that L. monocytogenes grows on cold smoked salmon by using different metabolic pathways ...
2015-08-04
Our nation's veterans continue to suffer emotional and psychological effects of war--some for decades. And while there has been greater attention directed recently toward post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and more veterans are seeking help, current psychotherapy treatments are less than optimal, according to a new narrative review published in the August 4, 2015 issue of JAMA.
In a review of medical literature over a 35-year period, researchers from the Steven and Alexandra Cohen Center for Post-Traumatic Stress and Traumatic Brain Injury -- a program in the Department ...
2015-08-04
AURORA, Colo. (Aug. 4, 2015) - Physicians should improve the way they discuss firearm safety with patients by showing more respect for the viewpoints of gun owners, according to an article by a University of Colorado School of Medicine faculty member published in the Aug. 4 issue of JAMA.
Marian "Emmy" Betz, MD, MPH, associate professor of emergency medicine, and Garen J. Wintemute, MD, MPH, professor of emergency medicine at the University of California Davis, write that physician counseling about gun safety is a key component of preventing firearm injury and death. ...
2015-08-04
In a randomized trial that included veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), those who received mindfulness-based stress reduction therapy showed greater improvement in self-reported PTSD symptom severity, although the average improvement appears to have been modest, according to a study in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue.
Posttraumatic stress disorder affects 23 percent of veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. Left untreated, PTSD is associated with high rates of other disorders, disability, and poor quality of life. ...
2015-08-04
Even though homicide and assault rates have decreased in the U.S. in recent years, the number of these and other types of violent acts remains high, according to a report in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue. The authors write that multiple strategies exist to improve interpersonal violence prevention efforts, and health care providers are an important part of this solution.
Interpersonal violence is a pervasive public health, social, and developmental threat that affects millions of U.S. residents each year. It is a leading cause of death ...
2015-08-04
A brief motivational intervention delivered during an emergency department visit did not improve outcomes for women with heavy drinking involved in abusive relationships, according to a study in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue.
There is a strong and reciprocal association between two highly prevalent public health problems: intimate partner violence (IPV) and heavy drinking. Each risk individually represents major costs to individuals, families, and society. The emergency department (ED) visit is conceptualized as a sensitive period or ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Opioid use and sexual violence among drug-using young adults in NYC
NYU study looks at sexual violence occurring while participants were using drugs