Authors
Tim Rhodes, Mark Davis, Ali Judd
Publication date
2004/5
Journal
Addiction
Volume
99
Issue
5
Pages
621-633
Publisher
Blackwell Science Ltd
Description
Aim  Recognizing the dearth of qualitative research on hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection associated with injecting drug use in the UK, this paper summarizes qualitative insights from a study exploring the social relations of HCV risk management among drug injectors in London.
Method  Adopting an inductive approach to data collection and analysis, 59 depth tape‐recorded qualitative interviews were undertaken in 2001 with drug injectors recruited via drug user networks.
Results  While access to injecting equipment was reportedly good, needle and syringe sharing continued in exceptional circumstances and in the context of ‘trust relationships’. Analyses of drug injectors’ accounts of variations of ‘I never share’ showed that this construction denoted less a descriptor of actual risk behaviour than presentation of perceived risk status. Paraphernalia sharing, including spoons and filters, was common. There was …
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