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1.
Health Care Manage Rev ; 48(1): 61-69, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36066549

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Existing studies that seek to understand nurses' experiences of burnout are dominated by cross-sectional, quantitative survey designs employing predetermined measures, often overlooking important job-related stressors that can be highly dependent on industry and professional contexts. Cancer nurses are a group of professionals who warrant special attention, as burnout in this profession is often attributed to high job demands and the challenge of caring for a vulnerable cohort of patients. A deeper understanding of the job demands associated with cancer nursing is required to provide insights about the work experiences of cancer nurses and identify aspects that mitigate burnout and stress. PURPOSE: This study describes the antecedents of burnout among Australian cancer nurses by focusing on the demands and resources inherent in their work. We aim to build on the existing literature by identifying job resources that may serve to mitigate the antecedents of burnout. METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: An in-depth interview study of cancer nurses across a spectrum of age and experience in Australian metropolitan public health care services was conducted over a 2-year period that coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic. The job demands and resources model framed this study of job-related factors associated with burnout and conversely job resources that may foster work engagement. RESULTS: Patient aggression, workload, emotional demands, and abusive peers and managers were reported as distinct job demands, whereas job significance and supportive peers who demonstrated leadership, along with task variety, were identified as job resources. CONCLUSION: Australian cancer nurses work in an environment where job demands are increasingly disproportionate to job resources, leading to significant risk of burnout. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Our study identifies modifiable strategies for improving work conditions for this group who play a critical role in the health care system.


Assuntos
Esgotamento Profissional , COVID-19 , Neoplasias , Enfermeiras e Enfermeiros , Humanos , Satisfação no Emprego , Estudos Transversais , Pandemias , Austrália , Esgotamento Profissional/psicologia , Carga de Trabalho/psicologia , Inquéritos e Questionários
2.
Sociol Health Illn ; 42(2): 379-392, 2020 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31657031

RESUMO

Healing architecture is a defining feature of contemporary hospital design in many parts of the world, with psychiatric in-patient facilities in Denmark at the forefront of this innovation. The approach rests on the contention that designed clinical spaces and the particular dispositions they express may promote patient recovery. Although the idea that health may be spatially mediated is well-established, the means of this mediation are far from settled. This article contributes to this debate by analysing medical encounters in the context of a new purpose-built psychiatric hospital opened in Slagelse, Denmark in late 2015 as an example of healing architecture for the region. Grounded in qualitative research conducted in two wards between 2016 and 2017, we explore the key material and social effects of the hospital's healing architecture, and the spaces and practices it enacts. Following the work of Michael Lynch, we consider both the designed 'spatial order' of the in-patient wards and the 'spatial orderings' unfolding therein with a particular interest in how order is accomplished in psychiatric work. With much of the existing discussion of healing architectures focusing on their impacts on patient wellbeing, we consider how healing architectures may also be transforming psychiatric work.


Assuntos
Arquitetura Hospitalar/tendências , Hospitais Psiquiátricos , Fluxo de Trabalho , Dinamarca , Planejamento Ambiental , Hospitais Psiquiátricos/organização & administração , Hospitais Psiquiátricos/tendências , Humanos , Transtornos Mentais/psicologia , Transtornos Mentais/terapia , Pesquisa Qualitativa
3.
Cult Med Psychiatry ; 41(3): 407-430, 2017 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28194621

RESUMO

The recovery approach is now among the most influential paradigms shaping mental health policy and practice across the English-speaking world. While recovery is normally presented as a deeply personal process, critics have challenged the individualism underpinning this view. A growing literature on "family recovery" explores the ways in which people, especially parents with mental ill health, can find it impossible to separate their own recovery experiences from the processes of family life. While sympathetic to this literature, we argue that it remains limited by its anthropocentricity, and therefore struggles to account for the varied human and nonhuman entities and forces involved in the creation and maintenance of family life. The current analysis is based on an ethnographic study conducted in Australia, which focused on families in which the father experiences mental ill health. We employ the emerging concept of the "family assemblage" to explore how the material, social, discursive and affective components of family life enabled and impeded these fathers' recovery trajectories. Viewing families as heterogeneous assemblages allows for novel insights into some of the most basic aspects of recovery, challenging existing conceptions of the roles and significance of emotion, identity and agency in the family recovery process.


Assuntos
Relações Familiares , Família/psicologia , Transtornos Mentais/psicologia , Pais/psicologia , Antropologia Cultural , Austrália , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Transtornos Mentais/reabilitação
4.
Health Promot Int ; 31(1): 231-41, 2016 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25398838

RESUMO

Sophisticated understandings of organizational dynamics and processes of organizational change are crucial for the development and success of health promotion initiatives. Theory has a valuable contribution to make in understanding organizational change, for identifying influential factors that should be the focus of change efforts and for selecting the strategies that can be applied to promote change. This article reviews select organizational change models to identify the most pertinent insights for health promotion practitioners. Theoretically derived considerations for practitioners who seek to foster organizational change include the extent to which the initiative is modifiable to fit with the internal context; the amount of time that is allocated to truly institutionalize change; the ability of the agents of change to build short-term success deliberately into their implementation plan; whether or not the shared group experience of action for change is positive or negative and the degree to which agencies that are the intended recipients of change are resourced to focus on internal factors. In reviewing theories of organizational change, the article also addresses strategies for facilitating the adoption of key theoretical insights into the design and implementation of health promotion initiatives in diverse organizational settings. If nothing else, aligning health promotion with organizational change theory promises insights into what it is that health promoters do and the time that it can take to do it effectively.


Assuntos
Implementação de Plano de Saúde/organização & administração , Promoção da Saúde/organização & administração , Modelos Organizacionais , Inovação Organizacional , Fortalecimento Institucional , Humanos
5.
J Ment Health ; 24(2): 63-7, 2015 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25915815

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Existing reports of the environmental aspects of recovery from mental illness have been confined to consideration of community spaces and the natural environment. AIMS: This paper aims to extend this literature by assessing the role of psychiatric settings in recovery. METHODS: Nineteen inpatients from the psychiatric unit of a large inner city hospital in Melbourne, Australia, took part in the study, which involved semi-structured interviews and focus groups. RESULTS: Analysis identified three major themes concerning consumers' experience within the unit: the importance of staff; lack of clear architectural identity resulting in confused or confusing space; and limited amenity due to poor architectural design. CONCLUSIONS: These findings have important implications for the delivery of care in psychiatric environments in ways that promote well being within these settings, and align with relevant mental health policy recommendations.


Assuntos
Ambiente de Instituições de Saúde/normas , Hospitais Psiquiátricos/normas , Pacientes Internados/psicologia , Transtornos Mentais/terapia , Satisfação do Paciente , Atitude do Pessoal de Saúde , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pesquisa Qualitativa
6.
Eur Addict Res ; 20(5): 254-67, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25196945

RESUMO

Considerable recent attention has focused on how harmful or problematic cannabis use is defined and understood in the literature and put to use in clinical practice. The aim of the current study is to review conceptual and measurement shortcomings in the identification of problematic cannabis use, drawing on the WHO ASSIST instrument for specific examples. Three issues with the current approach are debated and discussed: (1) the identification of problematic cannabis use disproportionately relies on measures of the frequency of cannabis consumption rather than the harms experienced; (2) the quantity consumed on a typical day is not considered when assessing problematic use, and (3) screening tools for problematic use employ a 'one-size-fits-all approach' and fail to reflect on the drug use context (networks and environment). Our commentary tackles each issue, with a review of relevant literature coupled with analyses of two Canadian data sources--a representative sample of the Canadian adult population and a smaller sample of adult, regular, long-term cannabis users from four Canadian cities--to further articulate each point. This article concludes with a discussion of appropriate treatment interventions and approaches to reduce cannabis-related harms, and offers suggested changes to improve the measurement of problematic cannabis use.


Assuntos
Usuários de Drogas , Abuso de Maconha/diagnóstico , Fumar Maconha , Meio Social , Humanos
7.
Health Sociol Rev ; : 1-17, 2024 Aug 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39160662

RESUMO

This article focuses on the workplace experiences of peer workers with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder (BPD) in mental healthcare settings in Australia. Our article is located at the intersection of political, social, cultural, and legislative forces that have fostered the development of peer work as a paid profession. We draw on the concept of stigma to analyse findings from qualitative interviews with peer workers conducted in [state], Australia. By examining peer work in the broader context of lifeworlds of BPD, we address the interplay of work and professional identity, and the experience of a profoundly stigmatised diagnosis at this intersection.Our findings demonstrate the physical and emotional effects of stigma and how it produces boundaries and inequalities between peer workers and other health practitioners. These boundaries are reinforced by invisible markers that delineate what is expected, 'normal' and deemed professional in the workplace. Moreover, these same medico-socio-political relations help shape peer workers' identities and experiences. The development of peer workforces in mental healthcare service delivery is a prominent area of reform in Australia and internationally. Our research highlights the urgency of efforts to transform current socio-cultural-political relations that inhibit peer workers in their roles and impact workplace experiences.

8.
Cult Health Sex ; 15(3): 311-26, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23311592

RESUMO

Research shows that sexual minorities are at greater risk for illicit substance use and related harm than their heterosexual counterparts. This study examines a group of active drug users to assess whether sexual identity predicts increased risk of substance use and harm from ecstasy, ketamine, alcohol, marijuana, cocaine and crack. Structured interviews were conducted with participants aged 15 years and older in Vancouver and Victoria, BC, Canada, during 2008-2012. Harm was measured with the World Health Organization's AUDIT and ASSIST tools. Regression analysis controlling for age, gender, education, housing and employment revealed lesbian, gay or bisexual individuals were significantly more likely to have used ecstasy, ketamine and alcohol in the past 30 days compared to heterosexual participants. Inadequate housing increased the likelihood of crack use among both lesbian, gay and bisexuals and heterosexuals, but with considerably higher odds for the lesbian, gay and bisexual group. Lesbian, gay and bisexual participants reported less alcohol harm but greater ecstasy and ketamine harm, the latter two categorised by the ASSIST as amphetamine and hallucinogen harms. Results suggest encouraging harm reduction among sexual minority, high-risk drug users, emphasising ecstasy and ketamine. The impact of stable housing on drug use should also be considered.


Assuntos
Homossexualidade/psicologia , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/psicologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Alcoolismo/psicologia , Bissexualidade/psicologia , Bissexualidade/estatística & dados numéricos , Colúmbia Britânica/epidemiologia , Cocaína Crack , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Homossexualidade/estatística & dados numéricos , Homossexualidade Feminina/psicologia , Homossexualidade Feminina/estatística & dados numéricos , Homossexualidade Masculina/psicologia , Homossexualidade Masculina/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Ketamina , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , N-Metil-3,4-Metilenodioxianfetamina , Análise de Regressão , Fatores de Risco , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/epidemiologia , Adulto Jovem
9.
Soc Sci Med ; 317: 115636, 2023 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36577224

RESUMO

This paper identifies and responds to three key challenges that have emerged in discussions of the assemblage across health geography. These challenges concern the problem of identifying the borders or limits of an assemblage of health; the problem of clarifying how such assemblages change over time; and the more general problem of identifying the affective and material character of the assemblage such that one may distinguish 'therapeutic' from 'oppressive' arrangements. The paper argues that each challenge calls for a novel analytics of power grounded in assessments of the generative forces of stratification and selection expressed within an assemblage. Assemblages of health are composed in relations of power, affect and desire that stratify the assemblage in ongoing processes of selection, acting upon heterogeneous entities (material and immaterial, intensive and extensive, human and nonhuman), bringing them into contact, causing them to affect one another, transforming their activity. Analysis of these processes provides potent tools for rethinking how relations, events, spaces and encounters mediate experiences of health and illness, and novel grounds for intervening in the formation of an assemblage of health.


Assuntos
Transtornos Mentais , Humanos , Geografia
10.
Int J Drug Policy ; 107: 103740, 2022 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35643794

RESUMO

From a developmental-psychological perspective, young people's recovery from drug misuse requires building up internal resilience and mobilising external resources to develop and maintain a shield of invulnerability. Vulnerability, in this context, is typically understood in terms of the material, social and/or affective conditions of drug use. These conditions are often targeted in prevention and intervention efforts, while also featuring in the emergence of recovery-oriented policy and treatment agendas internationally. In these ways, drug treatment programs implicitly impose vulnerability as a pre-condition to justify intervention and control, just as vulnerabilities are reproduced through the physical and social isolation that individuals experience in treatment. In this article we challenge normative understandings of recovery that regard vulnerability as an inherent condition of 'risk' and 'relapse' for those 'in recovery'. The article bridges interdisciplinary research to offer an analysis grounded in Deleuzian ideas for understanding vulnerability - an area for which his philosophy has been largely overlooked. As the case of recovery unravels, we analyse vulnerability in recovery as affirmative; as an ongoing transformative force of becoming-well.


Assuntos
Usuários de Drogas , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias , Adolescente , Humanos , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/prevenção & controle
11.
HERD ; 15(3): 315-328, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35016562

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this scoping review is to identify evidence on how characteristics of healing architecture in clinical contexts impact clinical practice and patient experiences. Based on these insights, we advance a more practice-based approach to the study of how healing architectures work. BACKGROUND: The notion of "healing architecture" has recently emerged in discussions of the spatial organization of healthcare settings, particularly in the Nordic countries. This scoping review summarizes findings from seven articles which specifically describe how patients and staff experience characteristics of healing architecture. METHODS: This scoping review was conducted using the framework developed by Arksey and O'Malley. We referred to the decision tool developed by Pollock et al. to confirm that this approach was the most appropriate evidence synthesis type to identify characteristics related to healing architecture and practice. To ensure the rigor of this review, we referred to the methodological guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis extension for Scoping Reviews. RESULTS: There are two main findings of the review. First, there is no common or operative definition of healing architecture used in the selected articles. Secondly, there is limited knowledge of how healing architecture shapes clinical and patient outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that further research is needed into how healing architectures make a difference in everyday clinical practices, both to better inform the development of evidence-based designs in the future and to further elaborate criteria to guide postoccupancy evaluations of purpose-built sites.


Assuntos
Atenção à Saúde , Instalações de Saúde , Humanos , Países Escandinavos e Nórdicos
12.
Int J Drug Policy ; 107: 103802, 2022 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35934584

RESUMO

The special section Practising recovery: New approaches and directions aims to shed light on the variety of epistemological, methodological and policy-making practices that emerge in empirical studies of recovery from the use of alcohol and other drugs (AOD). 'Recovery', as a concept and policy orientation, has received significant attention in sociological research and other disciplines. However, recovery understood as a practice that is crafted daily by service-users and workers reveals infinite manifestations that sociological research has yet to explore. Shifting from the study of recovery from AOD as a specific drug policy, to a practice-oriented study of recovery as a complex process of healing that unfolds in diverse social contexts, has the potential to advance the contribution of sociology to matters of illness and wellbeing. The articles collected for this special section begin to examine the complexity of recovery with a focus on the framing of recovery as a social, temporal, spatial and affective practice . In Practising Recovery, our aim is to focus on the routine aspects that accompany recovery as both a practice and policy object, emphasising the ambivalences, rather than the polemics of empirical engagements with recovery. In what follows, we describe our thinking about, in, and with the notion of ambivalence as an attempt to expand the meanings of recovery into unchartered terrain, before exploring some of the ways the articles in this special section serve to render visible the ambivalences that accompany the practice, as well as the methods, of researching recovery.


Assuntos
Formulação de Políticas , Política Pública , Humanos
13.
J Ethn Subst Abuse ; 10(1): 2-23, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21409701

RESUMO

This article reports on ethno-cultural differences in the use of alcohol and other drugs by using data derived from the Vancouver Youth Drug Reporting System. Data were collected between May and August 2006 among a sample of 514 youth aged 16 to 25. Statistically significant ethno-cultural differences were reported for "lifetime" alcohol and other drugs prevalence; alcohol and other drugs experience in the peer group; parental attitudes; and in the assessment of alcohol and other drugs prevention strategies. White and Aboriginal youth reported significantly higher rates of personal and peer group alcohol and other drugs use than other groups, whereas Chinese youth reported the lowest rates.The implications of these findings for alcohol and other drug prevention efforts are briefly discussed.


Assuntos
Consumo de Bebidas Alcoólicas/etnologia , Alcoolismo/etnologia , Pais/psicologia , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/etnologia , Adolescente , Consumo de Bebidas Alcoólicas/epidemiologia , Consumo de Bebidas Alcoólicas/prevenção & controle , Consumo de Bebidas Alcoólicas/psicologia , Alcoolismo/epidemiologia , Alcoolismo/prevenção & controle , Alcoolismo/psicologia , Canadá , Coleta de Dados , Etnicidade/psicologia , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Grupo Associado , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/epidemiologia , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/prevenção & controle , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias/psicologia , Fatores de Tempo , Adulto Jovem
14.
Int J Drug Policy ; 87: 102979, 2021 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33096366

RESUMO

Recovery from drug use is receiving increased attention in critical drug studies. Researchers point out the importance of scrutinizing the term and its meanings anew in order to better understand drug use treatment policies and their effects on the individuals they target. Informed by relational ontological thinking, this article analyses a series of empirical accounts of recovery experiences, and offers a critical assessment of the social contexts of recovery. Qualitative data collected in Azerbaijan and Germany provide distinctive reports of the differentiated experiences of youth as they make and re-make sense of their recovery within specific recovery contexts. Discussions reveal how recovery advances in relations between human and nonhuman actors including spaces, bodies, affects, and practices. On the basis of this analysis, we argue that recovery may be framed as an emergent and dynamic context that becomes with and from drug use.


Assuntos
Meio Social , Adolescente , Alemanha , Humanos
15.
Soc Sci Med ; 288: 113213, 2021 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32807572

RESUMO

Disabled young people have lower levels of participation in community life than nondisabled peers across a number of domains, including sporting activities, with profound implications for health, wellbeing and life course opportunities. Playing sport is a defining feature of identity for many young people in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Participation in sporting activities provides opportunities to develop competencies, to have fun and to compete, while also providing a sense of inclusion and peer group belonging. However, despite policies promoting inclusion of disabled young people in school and club sport, ableist attitudes and practices still function to exclude individuals who do not fit able-bodied norms. Drawing on recent 'assemblage thinking' in health and cultural geography, this paper explores the material, social and affective dimensions of 'enabling' and 'disabling' sporting assemblages, drawing on interviews with 35 disabled young people (12-25 years), parents and key informants. Many reported instances of demoralising exclusion in mainstream sporting activities. Some turned to adaptive sporting codes, designed for inclusion. In our exploration of participants' embodied experiences of enabling and disabling assemblages we employ assemblage theory to examine how social, affective and material forces and processes converge to either enable or constrain participation in local sporting activities. We close with a brief assessment of the implications of our analysis for ongoing efforts to promote inclusion for disabled youth in physical activity.


Assuntos
Crianças com Deficiência , Esportes , Adolescente , Exercício Físico , Humanos , Organizações , Instituições Acadêmicas
16.
Harm Reduct J ; 7: 15, 2010 Jul 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20618944

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: An important challenge in conducting social research of specific relevance to harm reduction programs is locating hidden populations of consumers of substances like cannabis who typically report few adverse or unwanted consequences of their use. Much of the deviant, pathologized perception of drug users is historically derived from, and empirically supported, by a research emphasis on gaining ready access to users in drug treatment or in prison populations with higher incidence of problems of dependence and misuse. Because they are less visible, responsible recreational users of illicit drugs have been more difficult to study. METHODS: This article investigates Respondent Driven Sampling (RDS) as a method of recruiting experienced marijuana users representative of users in the general population. Based on sampling conducted in a multi-city study (Halifax, Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver), and compared to samples gathered using other research methods, we assess the strengths and weaknesses of RDS recruitment as a means of gaining access to illicit substance users who experience few harmful consequences of their use. Demographic characteristics of the sample in Toronto are compared with those of users in a recent household survey and a pilot study of Toronto where the latter utilized nonrandom self-selection of respondents. RESULTS: A modified approach to RDS was necessary to attain the target sample size in all four cities (i.e., 40 'users' from each site). The final sample in Toronto was largely similar, however, to marijuana users in a random household survey that was carried out in the same city. Whereas well-educated, married, whites and females in the survey were all somewhat overrepresented, the two samples, overall, were more alike than different with respect to economic status and employment. Furthermore, comparison with a self-selected sample suggests that (even modified) RDS recruitment is a cost-effective way of gathering respondents who are more representative of users in the general population than nonrandom methods of recruitment ordinarily produce. CONCLUSIONS: Research on marijuana use, and other forms of drug use hidden in the general population of adults, is important for informing and extending harm reduction beyond its current emphasis on 'at-risk' populations. Expanding harm reduction in a normalizing context, through innovative research on users often overlooked, further challenges assumptions about reducing harm through prohibition of drug use and urges consideration of alternative policies such as decriminalization and legal regulation.

17.
Int J Drug Policy ; : 102852, 2020 Jul 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32709555

RESUMO

This article has been withdrawn at the request of the author(s) and/or editor. The Publisher apologizes for any inconvenience this may cause. The full Elsevier Policy on Article Withdrawal can be found at https://www.elsevier.com/about/our-business/policies/article-withdrawal.

18.
Addiction ; 115(7): 1378-1381, 2020 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32032446

RESUMO

In 1998 Howard Parker, Judith Aldridge & Fiona Measham published Illegal Leisure, a ground-breaking study of profound changes in British youth cultures in the 1990s, and the place of drugs and drug use in these upheavals. This work introduced the 'normalization thesis' to the social sciences, offering a novel vocabulary for re-imagining the normative character of young people's attitudes towards and experiences of illicit drug use. Arriving at the dawn of the new century, the book offered a thoroughgoing re-thinking of the character of youth cultures at a time of great social, cultural, economic and technological disruption. In so doing, the book deftly anticipated many of the most interesting currents of critical drug studies that followed.


Assuntos
Uso Recreativo de Drogas/tendências , Normas Sociais , Adolescente , Pesquisa Empírica , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Mudança Social/história , Reino Unido , Adulto Jovem
19.
Soc Sci Med ; 265: 113498, 2020 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33168269

RESUMO

In this paper we develop an understanding of 'whole onflow'. Extending philosopher Ralph Pred's original descriptions in materialist directions consistent with posthumanist and non-representational theory, we treat whole onflow as the progressing moment ever-materializing; as a never-ending more-than-human event happening everywhere that is existed in, registered, malleable and productive. In particular, using examples in health, we describe whole onflow's core qualities that lend it, as a vital forceful becoming, its productive capacities. We argue that whole onflow offers compelling ways of understanding the processual origins of health and many productions besides in all their diversity. Moreover, we argue that it offers ways of understanding how humans figure as part of the Universe's becoming.

20.
Soc Sci Med ; 253: 112922, 2020 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32240889

RESUMO

Drug consumption rooms directly attempt to intervene in and govern the place and time of drug use. Whilst the risk-reducing potentials of these interventions have been thoroughly evaluated, the consumption room literature offers fewer insights into the embodied, affective and situated dynamics that underscore service delivery. In this paper, we take up the notion of atmosphere to explore these dynamics in greater depth. Drawing on 12 months of ethnographic research in a German drug consumption room, we describe the manner in which atmospheres came to pervade and condition service encounters. More than simply providing texture to activities within the consumption room, we show how atmospheres gave rise to a distinct range of bodily capacities and therapeutic effects. Critically, these atmospheric affordances exceeded the risk-reducing objectives of the consumption room to encompass an emergent capacity to find repose, enact respite and foster modes of sociality and care. Our analysis further highlights the contextual contingencies through which the atmospheres of the consumption room emerged, including the efforts of both staff and clients to cultivate and control particular atmospheric qualities. We conclude by considering how closer attention to the atmospheric and affective dimensions of service delivery may challenge how consumption room interventions are enacted, valued and researched. This is to gesture towards a novel, atmospheric mode of harm reduction that has effects by transforming embodied potentials for both staff and clients.


Assuntos
Preparações Farmacêuticas , Transtornos Relacionados ao Uso de Substâncias , Antropologia Cultural , Atmosfera , Redução do Dano , Humanos
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