Records |
Author |
Atkinson, Amanda M.; Sumnall, Harry R. |
Title |
alcohol and drug depictions in magazines consumed by young people |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2010 |
Publication |
SuchtMagazin |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
36 |
Issue |
5; 10/2010 |
Pages |
23-24 |
Keywords |
nightlife; AOD use; psychoactive substances; conference proceedings; journal article |
Abstract |
This paper presents an overview of findings from a content analysis of depictions of alcohol and illicit drugs in popular UK magazines read by young people aged 11 to 18 years. Findings are discussed in relation to the potential influence of media representations of substance use on young people’s attitudes and behaviours and the potential role of the media in disseminating health related messages to young people. |
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1422-2221 |
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Auch auf Deutsch vorhanden |
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Call Number |
60.01-001 |
Serial |
60486 |
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Author |
Straw, Matthew A. |
Title |
OASIS – online support with a human face |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2010 |
Publication |
SuchtMagazin |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
36 |
Issue |
5; 10/2010 |
Pages |
21-22 |
Keywords |
nightlife; AOD use; psychoactive substances; conference proceedings; journal article |
Abstract |
OASIS is an online project designed to aid cocaine and alcohol users to check and regain control of their usage. It aims to determine if built-in social support boosts the effectiveness of online tools. |
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1422-2221 |
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Auch auf Deutsch vorhanden |
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Call Number |
60.01-001 |
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60485 |
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Author |
Silins, Edmund; Bleeker, Anne M.; Copeland, Jan; Dillon, Paul; Devlin, Kristina; van Bakkum, Floor; Noijen, Judith |
Title |
The importance of peer educator qualities : as perceived by ecstasy users |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2010 |
Publication |
SuchtMagazin |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
36 |
Issue |
5; 10/2010 |
Pages |
17-20 |
Keywords |
nightlife; AOD use; psychoactive substances; conference proceedings; journal article |
Abstract |
This study investigated the importance of peer educator qualities among ecstasy users in Australia (n=661) and the Netherlands (n=265). Experience with illicit drug use, an affinity with the ecstasy-using subculture and age emerged as important peer educator characteristics. In the Netherlands, more importance was placed on the peer educator having used illicit drugs and less importance was placed on age, subculture membership, being «cool» and gender than in Australia. The implications for peer-led ecstasy-related education practices are discussed. |
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1422-2221 |
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Auch auf Deutsch vorhanden |
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Call Number |
60.01-001 |
Serial |
60484 |
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Author |
Eul, Joachim |
Title |
Drug consumption and (safer) sex |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2010 |
Publication |
SuchtMagazin |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
36 |
Issue |
5; 10/2010 |
Pages |
12-16 |
Keywords |
nightlife; AOD use; psychoactive substances; conference proceedings; journal article |
Abstract |
According to a survey of approx. 700 people on the influence of alcohol and 13 other drugs on their sexual perception, sexual behaviour and condom use, it was found that most drugs increase sociableness, the desire for sex, orgasm strength and sensitivity to touch. However, they also lower the ability to orgasm and maintain an erection, and increase the risk of unsafe sex. The greatest risks here, in up to 75% of cases, occur after the consumption of GHB/GBL or crystal, and in 20 to 50% of cases following the consumption of speed, ecstasy, poppers, cocaine or large quantities of alcohol. |
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1422-2221 |
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Auch auf Deutsch vorhanden |
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no |
Call Number |
60.01-001 |
Serial |
60483 |
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Author |
Moloney, Molly; Hunt, Geoffrey |
Title |
Ecstasy, gender and accountability in a rave scene |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2010 |
Publication |
SuchtMagazin |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
36 |
Issue |
5; 10/2010 |
Pages |
7-11 |
Keywords |
nightlife; AOD use; psychoactive substances; conference proceedings; journal article |
Abstract |
The aim of this paper is to examine the accomplishment of gender in the context of the youth cultural formation of dance raves. Drawing on a narrative analysis of in-depth interviews with 300 young women and men in a San Francisco rave scene, we examine the role that the drug ecstasy plays in the gender formations at these events. We present evidence to show that using ecstasy within the social context of raves allows increased gender flexibility and alternatives to conventional notions of femininity and masculinity. This is particularly apparent in the ways that young women exhibit greater sexual assertiveness and young men demonstrate increased affective and communicative displays. Yet at the same time, their narratives provide ample evidence that gender accomplishment in this context does not occur outside the bounds of gender accountability and behaviors seen as gender inappropriate are actively policed and sanctioned. |
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1422-2221 |
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Auch auf Deutsch vorhanden |
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no |
Call Number |
60.01-001 |
Serial |
60482 |
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Author |
Stevens-Watkins, Danelle; Rostosky, Sharon |
Title |
Binge drinking in african american males from adolescence to young adulthood : the protective influence of religiosity, family connectedness, and close friends' substance use |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2010 |
Publication |
Substance use and misuse |
Abbreviated Journal |
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Volume |
45 |
Issue |
10 |
Pages |
1435-1451 |
Keywords |
African American; man; gender; adolescent; young adult; binge drinking; protective factors; spirituality and religion; religiosity; peer; group of intimates or friends; family; type of society and culture; research; study; statistical data |
Abstract |
We examined the contribution of culturally relevant protective factors (i.e., adolescent religiosity, family connectedness, and perceived close friends’ substance use) to the probability of young adult binge drinking among African American males. Participants (n = 1,599) drawn from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health were high school age adolescents (14-18 years, M = 16) at Wave 1 and young adults (18-26, M = 22) at Wave 3. Adolescent binge drinking was associated with all three protective factors. Perceived close friends’ substance use in adolescence was a protective factor in later binge drinking during young adulthood, and was moderated by age such that the effect was stronger for younger adolescents. Implications for culturally relevant research and prevention are discussed. |
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1532-2491 (electronic); 1082-6084 (paper) |
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Call Number |
50-15045 |
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60069 |
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Author |
Hunt, Neil |
Title |
Public health or human rights: what comes first? |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2004 |
Publication |
International journal of drug policy |
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15 |
Issue |
4; 09/2004 |
Pages |
231-237 |
Keywords |
human rights; public health; AOD use; harm reduction |
Abstract |
Respect for human rights is a defining feature of harm reduction, which is commonly characterised as a public health-based movement. The importance it attaches to ‘user-friendliness’ and the view that drug users have a right to the same respect and dignity that other users of health and social care services receive is largely undisputed among harm reductionists. Within harm reduction there is also a developing discourse identifying drug use itself as a human right; nudging harm reduction towards being a rights based movement. This allows us to describe two philosophies of harm reduction: a ‘weak rights’ version, in which people are entitled to good treatment and a ‘strong rights’ version that additionally recognises a basic right to use drugs. Prioritising human rights or public health can lead to different concepts of harm reduction and different forms of ‘right action’. Privileging health may even, in some circumstances, be consistent with prohibitionary policies if these reduce harm. By contrast, the strong rights version of harm reduction subordinates public health considerations to the right to use drugs and implies support for policies that may sometimes increase harm. In the UK, the publication of ‘The Angel Declaration’, which recognises a right to use drugs and proposes a skeletal regulatory framework for a post-prohibition era, adds to the impetus for harm reductionists to clarify whether they fully embrace a right to use drugs within their understanding of harm reduction. This paper elaborates these issues in the context of the constraints upon the development of an evidence-based approach to controlling drug use that arise from the UN Conventions of 1961, 1971 and 1988. |
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0955-3959 (Print); 1873-4758 (Electronic) |
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Aussi disponible en français: 50-15026 |
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Call Number |
50-15025 |
Serial |
60066 |
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Author |
Hüsler, Gebhard; Plancherel, Bernard; Werlen, Egon |
Title |
Psychosocial predictors of cannabis use in adolescents at risk |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2005 |
Publication |
Prevention Science |
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6 |
Issue |
3; 09/2005 |
Pages |
237-244 |
Keywords |
cannabis; adolescent; risk factors; protective factors; psychosocial environment; social integration; gender differences; study; statistical data; research; secondary prevention; Switzerland |
Abstract |
This research has tested a social disintegration model in conjunction with risk and protection factors that have the power to differentiate relative, weighted interactions among variables in different socially disintegrated groups. The model was tested in a cross-sectional sample of 1082 at-risk youth in Switzerland. Structural equation analyses show significant differences between the social disintegration (low, moderate, high) groups and gender, indicating that the model works differently for groups and for gender. For the highly disintegrated adolescents results clearly show that the risk factors (negative mood, peer network, delinquency) are more important than the protective factors (family relations, secure sense of self). Family relations lose all protective value against negative peer influence, but personal variables, such as secure self, gain protective power. |
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1389-4986 (Print) ; 1573-6695 (Online) |
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Call Number |
50-15024 |
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60065 |
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Author |
Hüsler, Gebhard; Plancherel, Bernard |
Title |
A gender specific model of substance use |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2006 |
Publication |
Addiction Research and Theory |
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14 |
Issue |
4; 08/2006 |
Pages |
399-412 |
Keywords |
AOD use; adolescent; risk factors; protective factors; family; peer; emotional and psychiatric depression; gender differences; study; statistical data; research; secondary prevention; Switzerland |
Abstract |
This research has tested a structural model of risk and protection factors among 1437 at-risk adolescents in Switzerland. The model was used to identify important gender and age differences. Our research shows that interactions between parents, peers, negative mood, and secure self create a range of risk factors for girls and boys, and for younger and older teens. Negative peer group was a greater risk for young girls than for young boys. Negative mood can serve as an early warning sign for boys, as can negative peer group for girls. Mood for boys was marginally associated with a substance-using peer group and with poor relationships in the family. This suggests that for boys the focus of prevention should be on family relationships and for girls on peer relationships. For older girls, secure self was the greatest protector against substance-using peers, whereas for younger boys and girls, parents continued to offer some protection. The focus on development of secure self in older girls holds promise for secondary prevention. |
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1606-6359 (Print); 1476-7392 (Online) |
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50-15023 |
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60064 |
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Author |
Hüsler, Gebhard; Blakeney, Ronny; Werlen, Egon |
Title |
Adolescent risk: the co-occurrence of illness, suicidality, and substance use |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2005 |
Publication |
Journal of youth and adolescence |
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34 |
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6; 12/2005 |
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547-557 |
Keywords |
AOD use; adolescent; risk factors; protective factors; emotional and psychiatric depression; suicidal behavior; study; statistical data; research; secondary prevention; Switzerland |
Abstract |
Illness is rarely considered a “risk factor” in adolescence. This study tests illness, suicidality and substance use as outcome measures in a path analysis of 1028 Swiss adolescents in secondary prevention programs. The model showed that negative mood (depression and anxiety) predicted two paths. One path led from negative mood to suicidality and from there to substance use. The other path led directly from negative mood to illness. Traditional protective factors (good relationships, secure identity) protected against the negative mood-suicide-substance path, but not against the negative mood-illness path. |
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1573-6601 (electronic); 0047-2891 (paper) |
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50-15022 |
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60063 |
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