Les mères usagères des drogues : Combler les lacunes dans la réduction des risques dans le contexte d'une double épidémie d'overdose et de violence dans un milieu urbain canadien.
Boyd et al. ont mis en lumière l'impact néfaste des politiques et pratiques punitives et stigmatisantes sur le risque d'overdose des mères, concluant sur la nécessité d'étendre le soutien et les soins dans la communauté. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.
By Jade Boyd, PhD, Lisa Maher, PhD, Tamar Austin, MPH, Jennifer Lavalley, MSW, Thomas Kerr, PhD, and Ryan McNeil, PhD / American Journal of Public Health (AJPH)
Abstract
Objectives. To identify key gaps in overdose prevention interventions for mothers who use drugs and the paradoxical impact of institutional practices that can increase overdose risk in the context of punitive drug policies and a toxic drug supply.
Methods. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 40 women accessing 2 women-only, low-barrier supervised consumption sites in Greater Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, between 2017 and 2019. Our analysis drew on intersectional understandings of structural, everyday, and symbolic violence.
Results. Participants’ substance use and overdose risk (e.g., injecting alone) was shaped by fear of institutional and partner scrutiny and loss (or feared loss) of child custody or reunification. Findings indicate that punitive policies and institutional practices that frame women who use drugs as unfit parents continue to negatively shape the lives of women, most significantly among Indigenous participants.
Conclusions. Nonpunitive policies, including access to safe, nontoxic drug supplies, are critical first steps to decreasing women’s overdose risk alongside gender-specific and culturally informed harm-reduction responses, including community-based, peer-led initiatives to maintain parent–child relationships.
(Am J Public Health. 2022;112(S2):S191–S198. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2022.306776)