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1.
Drug Alcohol Depend ; 256: 111119, 2024 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38350186

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Retail sales of derived psychoactive cannabis products (DPCPs) have increased in the U.S. since passing the 2018 Farm Bill and is unregulated in most states. This study investigated the types and commonly sold brands of DPCPs as well as promotional pricing on April 20th, a day associated with cannabis use. METHODS: On April 19-20, 2023, investigators conducted telephone surveys with 98 retail stores that sold DPCPs in Fort Worth, Texas (where the market was largely unregulated). RESULTS: Delta-8, Delta-9, and Delta-10 THC products were widely available, with 97%, 72%, and 82% of stores selling each type, respectively. Fifteen additional DPCPs were identified, and selling blends containing multiple types of THC was common. Frequently sold brands included Cake, Medusa/Modus, Torch, Urb, Kik, Tyson, 3Chi, Casper, Hidden Hills, Esco Bars, Happi, Hometown Hero, STNR, Bomb Bars, Baked, Hi On Nature, Looper, and Space God. Overall, 45% reported having 4/20 specials discounting prices on DPCPs, smoking devices/accessories, or everything in the store. Several stores also sponsored 4/20 promotional events including free THC gummies and "live delta demos where people can test cartridges and try smoking flower in the store." CONCLUSIONS: Findings highlight the growing complexity of the DPCP market, including numerous different intoxicating compounds and blends. Policymakers, researchers, and public health professionals should consider these complexities, as well as the commonly sold brands, when developing strategies to regulate DPCPs and protect consumer safety. Pricing policies may be an especially important form of harm reduction during events associated with heavy cannabis use, including 4/20.


Subject(s)
Cannabis , Hallucinogens , Humans , Texas , Marketing , Commerce , Analgesics , Cannabinoid Receptor Agonists
2.
Soc Sci Med ; 334: 116189, 2023 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37660520

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Facing statewide bans and increasing oversight in the U.S., representatives from the hemp-derived cannabinoid industry, product advocates, and consumers have been discussing self-policing and self-regulation. Prominent examples of these discussions are found online in Reddit groups. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative thematic analysis of Reddit posts between September 2020 to August 2022, focusing on the conversations surrounding regulation and consumer safety. Approximately 3800 posts were collected and subject to initial analysis. Thematic analysis was guided by literature on self-regulation and consumer health, from the anthropology of pharmaceuticals and the commercial determinants of health. RESULTS: The hemp-derived cannabinoid community is discussing self-regulation, shared standards, and transparency. Self-regulation is desired by many, in hopes to stave off prohibition or restrictive government regulation and simultaneously protect consumer health. However, there is little agreement as to what these standards should be, who should oversee them, or how basic concepts should be defined. Subreddit moderators note the ease at which unlicensed or untested products can enter retail store shelves or the informal market, thereby putting health at risk. Given the lack of collective agreement, the absence of state and federal oversight, and the possibilities for consumer deception, consumer frustration and confusion are rampant. With limited access to trustworthy and verifiable information about product safety, purchasers ultimately resort to experimenting on their own bodies to assess risks and benefits. CONCLUSIONS: Reddit posts reflect the multiple existing tensions in the evolving industry between a genuine appeal among some for workable and consistent industry standards that could protect consumer health, a distrust of regulatory scrutiny from state or federal government, and a desire by others to maintain current profits within the existing unrestrictive free market. Our findings emphasize the urgency of developing coherent, collective, agreed upon policies structured by objective, transparent, scientifically informed regulation in order to develop a safe supply of cannabinoid products and protect consumer health.


Subject(s)
Cannabinoids , Cannabis , Self-Control , Social Media , Humans , Anthropology
3.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs ; 84(2): 298-302, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36971730

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is a largely unregulated psychoactive substance rising in popularity in the United States. This study aimed to understand how retailers explained Delta-8 THC to potential customers and if these descriptions were associated with socioeconomic deprivation surrounding the retail location. METHOD: In Fort Worth, Texas, stores with retail alcohol, cannabidiol (CBD), or tobacco licenses were called. Among the 133 stores that sold Delta-8 THC, 125 retailers (94%) answered the question "What is Delta-8?" Qualitative methods were used to identify related themes; logistic regression models tested associations between themes and area deprivation index (ADI) scores, a measure of socioeconomic deprivation (1-10; 10 = most deprived areas). RESULTS: Retailers often compared Delta-8 THC to other substances (49%). Although most often described as a type of cannabis (34%), several retailers likened Delta-8 to CBD (19%) or hemp (7%), which are nonpsychoactive. Retailers also described potential effects from use (35%). Some retailers reported that they were unsure of what Delta-8 was (21%), told surveyors to look it up themselves (6%), or withheld information (9%). Higher ADI scores were associated with higher odds of retailers communicating limited information (odds ratio = 1.21, 95% CI [1.04, 1.40], p = .011). CONCLUSIONS: Study findings may inform the development of marketing regulations, as well as informational campaigns for both retailers and consumers.


Subject(s)
Cannabidiol , Cannabis , Hallucinogens , Humans , Dronabinol , Texas/epidemiology
4.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs ; 84(3): 357-360, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36971760

ABSTRACT

The 2018 U.S. Federal Agriculture Improvement Act ("Farm Bill") resulted in what some have called a "legal loophole" in cannabis regulation. As different types of cannabis products proliferate, so has the terminology used to attempt to categorize them. This article presents a variety of potential descriptors to encourage dialogue about the language used to classify the multitude of psychoactive cannabinoid products that have grown in popularity since the passage of the 2018 Farm Bill. Our recommended term for these products is derived psychoactive cannabis products. The term derived helps distinguish these products from naturally grown cannabis products. Psychoactive makes clear that these products can produce psychoactive effects. Finally, cannabis products balances accuracy and understandability regarding the substance while discouraging perpetuation of the word marijuana because of its racist inception. The resulting term, derived psychoactive cannabis products, is broad enough to encapsulate all related products while being specific enough to exclude other substances. Adopting accurate and consistent terminology will reduce confusion and help establish a more cohesive scientific literature base.


Subject(s)
Cannabinoids , Cannabis , Hallucinogens , Humans , Dronabinol
5.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36342930

ABSTRACT

Background: Retail sales of Delta-8 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) products have increased in the U.S. market since the passing of the 2018 Farm Bill, and there is currently little regulation of marketing/sales and limited related safety standards in many states. After thousands of calls to poison control centers (40% for individuals under 18 years old and 70% requiring health care facility evaluation), the Food and Drug Administration issued warnings on Delta-8 THC products, stating their psychoactive effects and that some manufacturers may synthesize Delta-8 using unsafe household chemicals. The current study describes the Delta-8 THC retail sales environment in Fort Worth, Texas. Given its relatively inexpensive manufacturing and that low prices are a major determinant of cannabis use, the price of Delta-8 THC products was examined. This study also examined whether retail outlets in areas with greater socioeconomic deprivation had higher odds of selling Delta-8 THC products. This is important because if Delta-8 THC retailers are disproportionately located in more socioeconomically deprived communities, residents of these communities can more easily access these products and may have higher risk of adverse consequences. Methods: Potential Delta-8 THC retailers were selected by identifying lists of current retail locations with alcohol, cannabidiol, and/or tobacco licenses in Fort Worth. Trained research assistants called outlets in September and October 2021 to query about sales of products containing Delta-8 THC. The response rate was 69% (n=1,223). Outlets' 9-digit zip codes were merged with Area Deprivation Index scores. Products and purported minimum age were described. Chi-squared and Student's t-tests were used. Results: Eleven percent of outlets (n=133) reported selling Delta-8 THC. Ninety-six percent sold vapes and/or "flower" (i.e., hemp leaves coated with Delta-8 THC distillate) and 76% sold edibles. Among the least expensive products available, edibles cost, on average, $8.58 less than flower/vapes (p<0.001). Outlets that sold Delta-8 THC were located in areas with greater deprivation (p=0.02). Most reported a minimum purchase age of 21; however, 4% reported 18 years or no minimum age. Conclusions: Delta-8 THC retail outlets were disproportionately located in areas with more socioeconomic deprivation. Legal intervention such as zoning, minimum age, and tax laws may help reduce Delta-8 THC-related disparities.

6.
CJEM ; 24(6): 585-598, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36087242

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Professional culture is a powerful influence in emergency departments, but incompletely understood. Disasters magnify cultural realities, and as such the COVID-19 pandemic offered a unique opportunity to better understand emergency medicine (EM) values, practices, and beliefs. METHODS: We conducted a collaborative ethnography at a tertiary care center during the acute phase of the response to the threat of COVID-19 (March-May 2020). Collaborative ethnography is a method that partners directly with communities during design, data gathering, and analysis to study culture. An ED-based research team gathered data including field notes from 300 h of participant observation and informal interviews, 42 semi-structured interviews, and 57 departmental documents. Data were deductively coded using a previously generated framework for understanding EM culture. RESULTS: Each of seven core values from the original framework were identified in the dataset and further contextualized understanding of EM culture. COVID-19 exacerbated pre-existing tensions and threats to the core values of EM. For example, the desire to provide patient-centered care was impeded by strict visitor restrictions; the ability to treat life-threatening illness was impaired by new resuscitation room layouts and infection control procedures; and subtle changes in protocols had downstream impact on flow and the ability to balance needs and resources at a system level. The cultural values related to teams were protective and strengthened during this time. The pandemic exposed problems with the status quo, underscored inherent tensions between ED values, and highlighted threats to self-identity. CONCLUSION: COVID-19 has highlighted and compounded existing tensions and threats to the core values of EM, underscoring a critical mismatch between values and practice. Realignment of the realities of ED work with staff values is urgently needed.


RéSUMé: CONTEXTE: La culture professionnelle est une influence puissante dans les services d'urgence, mais elle est incomplètement comprise. Les catastrophes amplifient les réalités culturelles et, à ce titre, la pandémie de COVID-19 a offert une occasion unique de mieux comprendre les valeurs, les pratiques et les croyances de la médecine d'urgence (MU). MéTHODES: Nous avons mené une ethnographie collaborative dans un centre de soins tertiaires pendant la phase aiguë de la réponse à la menace du COVID-19 (mars-mai 2020). L'ethnographie collaborative est une méthode qui s'associe directement aux communautés pendant la conception, la collecte de données et l'analyse pour étudier la culture. Une équipe de recherche basée à l'urgence a recueilli des données, y compris des notes de terrain tirées de 300 heures d'observation des participants et d'entrevues informelles, de 42 entrevues semi-structurées et de 57 documents ministériels. Les données ont été codées de manière déductive à l'aide d'un cadre précédemment créé pour comprendre la culture de la MU. RéSULTATS: Chacune des sept valeurs fondamentales du cadre original a été identifiée dans l'ensemble de données et a permis de mieux comprendre la culture de la MU. COVID-19 a exacerbé les tensions préexistantes et les menaces qui pèsent sur les valeurs fondamentales de la MU. Par exemple, le désir de fournir des soins centrés sur le patient a été entravé par des restrictions strictes concernant les visiteurs ; la capacité de traiter des maladies potentiellement mortelles a été compromise par les nouvelles dispositions des salles de réanimation et des procédures de contrôle des infections ; et des changements subtils dans les protocoles ont eu un impact en aval sur le flux et la capacité à équilibrer les besoins et les ressources au niveau du système. Les valeurs culturelles liées aux équipes étaient protectrices et renforcées pendant cette période. La pandémie a mis en évidence les problèmes liés au statu quo, souligné les tensions inhérentes entre les valeurs des services d'urgence et mis en évidence les menaces pour l'identité personnelle. CONCLUSION: COVID-19 a mis en évidence et aggravé les tensions et les menaces existantes pour les valeurs fondamentales de la MU, soulignant un décalage critique entre les valeurs et la pratique. Il est urgent de réaligner les réalités du travail dans les services d'urgence sur les valeurs du personnel.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Emergency Medicine , COVID-19/epidemiology , Emergency Service, Hospital , Humans , Pandemics , Tertiary Care Centers
7.
BMJ Open Qual ; 9(1)2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32046977

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Trauma care represents a complex patient journey, requiring multidisciplinary coordinated care. Team members are human, and as such, how they feel about their colleagues and their work affects performance. The challenge for health service leaders is enabling culture that supports high levels of collaboration, co-operation and coordination across diverse groups. We aimed to define and improve relational aspects of trauma care at Gold Coast University Hospital. METHODS: We conducted a mixed-methods collaborative ethnography using the relational coordination survey-an established tool to analyse the relational dimensions of multidisciplinary teamwork-participant observation, interviews and narrative surveys. Findings were presented to clinicians in working groups for further interpretation and to facilitate co-creation of targeted interventions designed to improve team relationships and performance. FINDINGS: We engaged a complex multidisciplinary network of ~500 care providers dispersed across seven core interdependent clinical disciplines. Initial findings highlighted the importance of relationships in trauma care and opportunities to improve. Narrative survey and ethnographic findings further highlighted the centrality of a translational simulation programme in contributing positively to team culture and relational ties. A range of 16 interventions-focusing on structural, process and relational dimensions-were co-created with participants and are now being implemented and evaluated by various trauma care providers. CONCLUSIONS: Through engagement of clinicians spanning organisational boundaries, relational aspects of care can be measured and directly targeted in a collaborative quality improvement process. We encourage healthcare leaders to consider relationship-based quality improvement strategies, including translational simulation and relational coordination processes, in their efforts to improve care for patients with complex, interdependent journeys.


Subject(s)
Quality Improvement , Wounds and Injuries/therapy , Anthropology, Cultural/methods , Humans , Surveys and Questionnaires , Wounds and Injuries/epidemiology , Wounds and Injuries/physiopathology
8.
AIDS Behav ; 20(12): 2798-2811, 2016 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26983950

ABSTRACT

Men who have sex with men (MSM), particularly racial/ethnic minority MSM, are disproportionately affected by HIV in the United States and Texas. Bareback sex or condomless anal intercourse (CAI) can be a high HIV risk behavior. Despite this, a majority of MSM continues to engage in barebacking. Research suggests racial/ethnic differences in barebacking exist; however, these conclusions remain unclear due to insufficient sample sizes to compare racial/ethnic groups. Our cross-sectional correlational design explores barebacking correlates (substance use during sex, safe sex fatigue, and optimistic HIV treatment beliefs) within and between racial/ethnic groups among 366 MSM. Regression models are significant for Latino and African-American MSM alone and for all MSM combined, though not significant for European-American and Other Race/Ethnicity MSM alone. Our findings suggest motivations and behaviors underlying barebacking among MSM vary by racial/ethnic membership with clinical implications for informing culturally sensitive HIV interventions and prevention programs for target racial/ethnic groups.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , HIV Seronegativity , HIV Seropositivity/ethnology , Homosexuality, Male/ethnology , Sexual Behavior/ethnology , Unsafe Sex/ethnology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Attitude to Health , Cross-Sectional Studies , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Statistics as Topic , Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Texas , United States , Young Adult
11.
Behav Sleep Med ; 11(1): 40-55, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23347116

ABSTRACT

To better gain insight into patient responses to insomnia, we take a medical anthropologically informed approach to patient beliefs and behaviors, particularly those related to self-diagnosis, management, help-seeking, and self-treatment of insomnia. We conducted 24 in-depth qualitative interviews in which participants were asked their beliefs about the origin of their insomnia, its anticipated course, their evaluation of symptoms, their responses, and their expectations surrounding treatment. Important and novel data were generated about patient beliefs and behaviors related to problem sleeping. Patients identified barriers to treatment, particularly those contextualized within a general social stigma and personal isolation, in which their problems sleeping were not taken seriously. The interview format was particularly conducive to making patients comfortable discussing the personal changes they made to their medically prescribed treatment plans, or supplanting their medical therapy with some kind of complimentary and alternative medicine (CAM) therapy. These are important issues in the long term management of chronic insomnia. We underscore concern about the need to evaluate the efficacy of therapies that so many people with insomnia are driven to try.


Subject(s)
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/psychology , Self Care/psychology , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/psychology , Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/therapy , Adult , Aged , Complementary Therapies/psychology , Diagnostic Self Evaluation , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Self Report , Social Stigma
12.
Soc Sci Med ; 79: 48-56, 2013 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22770968

ABSTRACT

In the elicitation of explanatory models for illnesses, accounts of spouses are strangely absent. This becomes critically missing information for a disorder like sleep apnea, in which a spouse or partner is often the primary agent responsible for the initial diagnosis and push to seek medical care. An apnea patient's understanding of their own illness is critically shaped less by their own direct experience of symptoms, and more by how someone else comes to experience, understand, and interpret them. Men and women, patients and partners, can vary tremendously in their decisions as to if, when, and how to either seek care for themselves, or to influence a partner to seek care. This cross-sectional, exploratory, mixed-methods study from the Dallas metropolitan area, USA, was done in 2006 to illuminate the significance of gender and partner-reporting in shaping the lay diagnosis, management, and treatment of obstructive sleep apnea. Patients clinically diagnosed with sleep apnea were recruited by a physician; a medical anthropologist then arranged in-depth, semi-structured interviews with both patients and partners (n = 24). Communication within relationships, along with social and cultural norms and expectations surrounding "proper" sleep for men and women, played important roles in how apnea was recognized, accepted, and acted upon by patients. More than half of men and women (patients or spouses) mention dissatisfaction with "positive airway pressure" machines, the primary treatment for obstructive apnea; partial compliance with medical advice was high, with dissatisfaction being patterned by gender. The medical anthropology of sleep disorders offers insight into traditional gender roles surrounding expected sleep and "proper" sleep roles. Given the small proportion of adults with apnea that currently see a physician for care, an expanded explanatory model involving spouses or partners promises to reveal new insight into patient behavior surrounding diagnosis, management, and treatment.


Subject(s)
Interpersonal Relations , Sleep Apnea, Obstructive/diagnosis , Sleep Apnea, Obstructive/therapy , Spouses/psychology , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , Spouses/statistics & numerical data
13.
Soc Sci Med ; 66(3): 715-26, 2008 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18006129

ABSTRACT

This study explores the role of work in patient narratives about their experiences with insomnia. "Work" includes such facets as the nature of one's occupation, the associated volume or amount of work required, mental demands related to work, work schedules and work-related stress. Interviews conducted with 24 patients aged between 22 and 74 receiving treatment for insomnia at one of two sleep medicine clinics in Oregon and Texas, USA, suggest that work is a pivotal influence in shaping interpretations of the nature of insomnia, its causes, and the efficacy of medical treatment. Results suggest correlations between sleeplessness and modern working lifestyles in American culture, in which labor seems to transcend the physical workplace, manifesting itself in the form of cognitive labor or continued problems into retirement. Patients often cite work as the primary causal agent in the development of their insomnia, their primary reason for needing "good" sleep, their impetus for seeking medical attention, and behavioral compliance with a medically prescribed regimen. Insomnia as an illness experience thus serves as a mechanism through which respondents consciously or unconsciously comment on the nature of work in their lives. The medical and social implications of these results are discussed.


Subject(s)
Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders/etiology , Sleep , Work , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Qualitative Research , United States
14.
Med Anthropol Q ; 20(3): 379-98, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16937622

ABSTRACT

Drawing on ethnographic research conducted along the Sierra Leone-Guinea border during wartime, this article explores the contested nature of the body and bodily illness during times of spectacular political violence. For both perpetrators and survivors of conflict, the body and bodily illness became tools over which each sought to control definitions of Self and identity. Finally, the article considers emic interpretations and contested meanings of the local illness hypertension, or haypatensi, that occurred among the displaced. I document how discussions of haypatensi allowed horrific subjective experiences to become mediated, enabling conflict survivors to understand and express the pain of their trauma and vulnerability, and begin recourse toward reestablishing order and control over their lives. Even these discussions of illness, however, involved competition over control of meanings and prescriptive models with medical practitioners. Haypatensi thus reveals how lived, traumatic experiences and their cultural representations within illness are linked.


Subject(s)
Hypertension/psychology , Violence , Warfare , Wounds and Injuries/psychology , Conflict, Psychological , Guinea , Humans , Narration , Sierra Leone
15.
Arch Sex Behav ; 33(3): 249-57, 2004 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15129043

ABSTRACT

Environmental influences on sexual behavior are difficult to examine given their temporal distance from the sexual act and the cost of long-term longitudinal studies. We examined environmental influences on risky sexual behavior in young gay men using the Situational Presentation (Sitpres) methodology, where situations in which relevant environmental variables are presented as computer vignettes with the variables randomly allocated, and participants rate the likelihood of their engaging in unsafe sexual behavior. A total of 100 gay men aged between 18 and 26 years of age completed 20 situational presentations with the outcome being the likelihood of engaging in unprotected anal intercourse. On regression analysis, 3 environmental variables significantly predicted safer sex: perceived gay/bisexual men's norms toward condom use; availability of HIV prevention messages; and what one's religion says about gay sex. Not significant were family, media, legal, and work/school attitudes to homosexuality. Demographic variables that were predictors included education, age, sexual orientation, and degree of being "out" about sexual orientation. These data suggest that environmental factors can be approximated using the Sitpres methodology, and that more proximal environmental variables have a stronger impact than distal ones.


Subject(s)
Coitus/psychology , Condoms , HIV Infections , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Homosexuality, Male/psychology , Religion and Sex , Adult , Condoms/statistics & numerical data , HIV Infections/psychology , Humans , Impulsive Behavior/psychology , Male , Regression Analysis , Risk-Taking , Sampling Studies , Sexual Partners/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States
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