Speedball and Crack Injection in London | Groins, Veins and Injecting Environment

Speedball and crack injection in London groins, veins and injecting environment THE CENTRE FOR RESEARCH ON DRUGS AND HEALTH BEHAVIOUR Tim Rhodes Jo Kimber, Daniel Briggs, Vivian Hope, Greg Holloway, Steve Jones

2 crack and groin injecting Six City Study in England, n=952, 2003/2004, Hope et al o n=952, six locations o 45% groin injecting o 40% crack/speedball injecting o > 70% crack injection Bristol & Manchester, and > 50% London [Judd et al., 2005] o crack injectors more likely to be groin injectors (49% vs 34%) o groin injectors more likely to have an open wound infection (26% vs 18%) and DVT in last year (28% vs 8%) Rhodes et al. (2006) “Groin injecting in the context of crack cocaine and homelessness”, International Journal of Drug Policy, 17: 164-170.

4 qualitative study speedball injectors (n=44), Bristol and London, 2006 median age, 33 (range 23-53) male, 75% homeless in past year, 69% speedball in past month, 80% mean years speedball, 7 (<1-23 years)...

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Cutaneous Complications of Intravenous Drug Abuse

Summary
Injection drug abuse is a world-wide problem responsible for numerous minor to life-threatening and fatal complications. The skin is the tissue most evidently affected by intravenous drug addiction. A wide spectrum of cutaneous complications may occur in intravenous drug users. These include acute or delayed local complications, hypersensitivity reactions, cutaneous manifestations of systemic infections or becoming the site of toxigenic infections. Between 1996 and 2001, in our institution in south-eastern France, we observed cutaneous complications after crushed buprenorphine tablet injections in 13 patients. This paper reviews and classifies adverse effects of parenteral drug abuse on the skin.

Introduction
Injection drug abuse is a world-wide problem responsible for numerous minor to life-threatening and fatal complications.[1] These complications depend mainly on the drug, the dose injected, the method of delivery, the site of injection and the presence of infectious agents. Overdose and the transmission of blood-borne infections such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis viruses B and C through sharing unsterile injection equipment are well known ...

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