Individual and social network correlates of responding to multiple overdoses among a cohort of people who use drugs
暂无分享,去创建一个
Jennifer L. Pearson | C. Latkin | K. Wagner | O. Falade-Nwulia | Charles Marks | Marisa Felsher | M. Felsher
[1] J. Carroll,et al. Drug induced homicide laws may worsen opioid related harms: An example from rural North Carolina. , 2021, The International journal on drug policy.
[2] B. Lambdin,et al. The naloxone delivery cascade: Identifying disparities in access to naloxone among people who inject drugs in Los Angeles and San Francisco, CA. , 2021, Drug and alcohol dependence.
[3] K. Wagner,et al. Factors Associated With Calling 911 for an Overdose: An Ethnographic Decision Tree Modeling Approach. , 2021, American journal of public health.
[4] K. Wagner,et al. "I wanted to close the chapter completely … and I feel like that [carrying naloxone] would keep it open a little bit": Refusal to carry naloxone among newly-abstinent opioid users and 12-step identity. , 2021, The International journal on drug policy.
[5] C. Latkin,et al. Trends in overdose experiences and prevention behaviors among people who use opioids in Baltimore, MD, 2017-2019. , 2021, Drug and alcohol dependence.
[6] Alex S. Bennett,et al. Reasons People Who Use Opioids Do Not Accept or Carry No-Cost Naloxone: Qualitative Interview Study , 2020, JMIR formative research.
[7] K. Wagner,et al. "Generally, you get 86'ed because you're a liability": An application of Integrated Threat Theory to frequently witnessed overdoses and social distancing responses. , 2020, Social science & medicine.
[8] H. Carver,et al. Provision of peer support at the intersection of homelessness and problem substance use services: a systematic ‘state of the art’ review , 2020, BMC Public Health.
[9] S. Mehta,et al. Fatal overdose prevention and experience with naloxone: A cross-sectional study from a community-based cohort of people who inject drugs in Baltimore, Maryland , 2020, PloS one.
[10] C. Strike,et al. 'It's too much, I'm getting really tired of it': Overdose response and structural vulnerabilities among harm reduction workers in community settings. , 2019, The International journal on drug policy.
[11] Daniel Shearer,et al. Naloxone distribution, trauma, and supporting community-based overdose responders. , 2019, The International journal on drug policy.
[12] C. Latkin,et al. More than just availability: Who has access and who administers take-home naloxone in Baltimore, MD , 2019, PloS one.
[13] K. Wagner,et al. Prevalence and correlates of carrying naloxone among a community-based sample of opioid-using people who inject drugs. , 2019, The International journal on drug policy.
[14] K. Wagner,et al. Post-overdose interventions triggered by calling 911: Centering the perspectives of people who use drugs (PWUDs) , 2019, PloS one.
[15] T. Kerr,et al. Peer worker involvement in low-threshold supervised consumption facilities in the context of an overdose epidemic in Vancouver, Canada. , 2019, Social science & medicine.
[16] Geoff Bardwell,et al. Addressing Intersecting Housing and Overdose Crises in Vancouver, Canada: Opportunities and Challenges from a Tenant-Led Overdose Response Intervention in Single Room Occupancy Hotels , 2018, Journal of Urban Health.
[17] J. Bowles,et al. “I Gotta Go With Modern Technology, So I’m Gonna Give ’em the Narcan”: The Diffusion of Innovations and an Opioid Overdose Prevention Program , 2018, Qualitative health research.
[18] C. Latkin,et al. Awareness and access to naloxone necessary but not sufficient: Examining gaps in the naloxone cascade. , 2018, The International journal on drug policy.
[19] Avril Taylor,et al. "Once I'd done it once it was like writing your name": Lived experience of take-home naloxone administration by people who inject drugs. , 2018, The International journal on drug policy.
[20] Shane R Mueller,et al. Why are some people who have received overdose education and naloxone reticent to call Emergency Medical Services in the event of overdose? , 2017, The International journal on drug policy.
[21] Rachel Faulkner-Gurstein. The social logic of naloxone: Peer administration, harm reduction, and the transformation of social policy. , 2017, Social science & medicine.
[22] M. Dechman. Peer helpers' struggles to care for "others" who inject drugs. , 2015, The International journal on drug policy.
[23] Al Ozonoff,et al. Opioid overdose rates and implementation of overdose education and nasal naloxone distribution in Massachusetts: interrupted time series analysis , 2013, BMJ.
[24] C. McCarty,et al. Personal Social Network Factors Associated with Overdose Prevention Training Participation , 2013, Substance use & misuse.
[25] Nabarun Dasgupta,et al. Project Lazarus: community-based overdose prevention in rural North Carolina. , 2011, Pain medicine.
[26] T. Valente,et al. Evaluation of an overdose prevention and response training programme for injection drug users in the Skid Row area of Los Angeles, CA. , 2010, The International journal on drug policy.
[27] C. Latkin,et al. Evaluation of the Staying Alive programme: training injection drug users to properly administer naloxone and save lives. , 2009, The International journal on drug policy.
[28] C. Semmler,et al. Overdose training and take-home naloxone for opiate users: prospective cohort study of impact on knowledge and attitudes and subsequent management of overdoses. , 2008, Addiction.
[29] E. Wood,et al. Risk profile of individuals who provide assistance with illicit drug injections. , 2006, Drug and alcohol dependence.
[30] J. Strang,et al. Take home naloxone and the prevention of deaths from opiate overdose: two pilot schemes , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[31] Ellen Iverson,et al. "I felt like a superhero": the experience of responding to drug overdose among individuals trained in overdose prevention. , 2014, The International journal on drug policy.