"Phewww, bingoed!": motivations and variations of methods for using heroin in Scottish prisons
"Phewww, bingoed!": motivations and variations of methods for using heroin in Scottish prisons
While prison is recognised as a setting for infectious disease transmission among drug users, little is known about psychological and situational factors influencing high-risk behaviours, knowledge vital to prison-based interventions. Qualitative interview and focus group data were collected from staff and prisoners in six Scottish prisons. A general view was that prison heroin use had increased, but injecting and sharing remained a covert and minority behaviour. "Anti-injecting culture" among staff and most prisoners emerged as an important factor, though not linked by prisoners to an "anti-drug culture". Of individual and social risk factors identified, only the desire to inject in prison for maximum effect was unique to prison injectors and sharers. This decision-based behaviour requires further theory-focussed research. Given these findings, introducing needle exchanges into Scottish prisons could undermine their low drug injection rates. Enabling injecting, albeit within a public health framework, conflicts with the major prison objective of rehabilitation.
Drugs, Harm reduction, Injecting, Prison, Sharing risk
205-224
Wilson, G. B.
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Galloway, J.
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Shewan, D.
52f83f5c-22e6-4bda-a70a-3b5e9cbee5e8
Marshall, L.
93e7b208-cd70-41e7-859a-67c2cb519a8b
Vojt, G.
20a2722e-e8b5-49e9-9f9f-01cf4e1b1387
Marley, C.
07d0a7d4-8737-4f7b-bb08-9fb51f49f66b
20 November 2006
Wilson, G. B.
837b2f8b-a4ac-405a-9cea-c7baf959f379
Galloway, J.
780179c7-b330-44b7-8e89-50f594f8af04
Shewan, D.
52f83f5c-22e6-4bda-a70a-3b5e9cbee5e8
Marshall, L.
93e7b208-cd70-41e7-859a-67c2cb519a8b
Vojt, G.
20a2722e-e8b5-49e9-9f9f-01cf4e1b1387
Marley, C.
07d0a7d4-8737-4f7b-bb08-9fb51f49f66b
Wilson, G. B., Galloway, J., Shewan, D., Marshall, L., Vojt, G. and Marley, C.
(2006)
"Phewww, bingoed!": motivations and variations of methods for using heroin in Scottish prisons.
Addiction Research and Theory, 15 (2), .
(doi:10.1080/16066350601160639).
Abstract
While prison is recognised as a setting for infectious disease transmission among drug users, little is known about psychological and situational factors influencing high-risk behaviours, knowledge vital to prison-based interventions. Qualitative interview and focus group data were collected from staff and prisoners in six Scottish prisons. A general view was that prison heroin use had increased, but injecting and sharing remained a covert and minority behaviour. "Anti-injecting culture" among staff and most prisoners emerged as an important factor, though not linked by prisoners to an "anti-drug culture". Of individual and social risk factors identified, only the desire to inject in prison for maximum effect was unique to prison injectors and sharers. This decision-based behaviour requires further theory-focussed research. Given these findings, introducing needle exchanges into Scottish prisons could undermine their low drug injection rates. Enabling injecting, albeit within a public health framework, conflicts with the major prison objective of rehabilitation.
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Published date: 20 November 2006
Keywords:
Drugs, Harm reduction, Injecting, Prison, Sharing risk
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 502378
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502378
ISSN: 1606-6359
PURE UUID: 7b30fb3d-1983-4197-b28e-29d46d80444e
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Date deposited: 24 Jun 2025 16:43
Last modified: 25 Jun 2025 02:14
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Author:
G. B. Wilson
Author:
J. Galloway
Author:
D. Shewan
Author:
G. Vojt
Author:
C. Marley
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