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Journal Article

Citation

Smith BD, Lewis Q, Offiong A, Willis K, Prioleau M, Powell TW. J. Ethn. Subst. Abuse 2022; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15332640.2022.2068719

PMID

35499103

Abstract

Physical, social, economic, and political environments can increase harm and risk among people who use drugs. These factors may be exacerbated in urban environments with a history of systemic inequality toward African Americans. However, racialized risk environment models have rarely been used within substance use research. To fill this gap, the current qualitative study sought to describe the racialized risk environment of an African American sample of 21 adults with a history of illicit drug use living in Baltimore, MD. Semi-structured interviews were conducted. Data were analyzed using qualitative content analysis to identify themes related to illicit drug use, neighborhood context, violence, social interactions, and income generation. Themes related to the physical (e.g., the increased visibility of drug markets), social (e.g., normalization of drug use within social networks), and economic (e.g., financial hardships) risk environments emerged from this sample. These perceptions and themes can aid in developing and refining substance use programming within racialized settings.


Language: en

Keywords

African Americans; qualitative research; substance use; risk environment

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