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Supplement to Pathways to High-Risk Drug Abuse Among Urban Youth: Club Drugs
Research Method: Basic Research
Principal Investigators: Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D. (PI)
Grant: National Institute on Drug Abuse OAR Supplement (DA-11421-02S1)
Dates of Study: 2000-2002

Abstract
The study "Pathways to High-Risk Drug Abuse Among Urban Youth" indicates the emerging use of "club" or "designer" drugs (e.g., ecstasy, ketamine, other amphetamines, GHB and cocaine) among a mix of multiethnic urban, suburban and college youth and young adults, all with a range of sexual experience and preference. The study also indicates that designer drug use occurs at regular or after-hour clubs or at other social events, such as raves and house parties, that facilitate drug use. Little research has been conducted on the diffusion of, and sex and health risks associated to, the increase in club and designer drug use among urban youth. This supplemental study documents the psychosocial and cultural contexts of club drug use in Hartford, CT, the social networks and environments that facilitate the diffusion of these drugs into the urban environment, and the impact on sexual risk among the city's youth population.
Project Goals and Objectives
Understand and document the social contexts (e.g., regular and after-hours clubs, raves, house parties) in which designer drugs are entering the urban environment, and that heighten the potential for forming new relationships and impacting sexual behavior and risks.
Describe the psychological and social contexts and meanings associated with the use of club and designer drugs as compared to traditional drug use.
Describe the diffusion and dissemination patterns of these drugs amongst urban youth.
Describe the sexual behavior and HIV risks associated with the use of designer and club drugs.
Utilize the information to create drug and HIV prevention strategies aimed at club drug users and their networks.

Project Contact:
Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D., Principal Investigator
Executive Director

Project Staff:
Jean J. Schensul, Ph.D., Principal Investigator
Mark Convey, M.A.,
Research Assistant
Julie Eiserman, M.A., Ethnographer (Hispanic Health Council)

Project Details
Focused on a number of clubs in the Hartford area, the project used a combination of methods (participant observation, informal and in-depth interviews, survey) for data collection. Staff conducted 25 in-depth interviews, and administered 207 surveys to club-goers, workers and other youth. Study results show an increase in regular use of ecstasy and other club drugs among the urban youth population. Regular and after-hours clubs create a culture of drug use through marketing of music, fashion and entertainment. This culture gives club goers the sense of a "safe space" to buy and use designer drugs; observation and interviews also suggest that club owners/workers often designate who is able to sell in the club, making the drug market an extension of the club's "business." With respect to ecstasy and other club drug use and sexual risk, participants in the study indicated that the use of designer drugs affected their willingness to have sex, increased the number of sexual encounters, the number of sex partners, and the types of risky sexual experimentation engaged in, suggesting the potential for an increased risk for HIV, STD transmission and other associated health problems for this population. Results from this study provided the foundation for the five-year study, "Urban Lifestyles", launched in October 2001.

View findings from this project

Link to Research Methods page

Link to Basic Research Methods page

Links to other ICR projects:

Pathways to High-Risk Drug Abuse Among Urban Youth
Urban Lifestyles: Club Drugs, Resource Inequities and Health Risks in Urban Youth
Minority Supplement to Pathways to High-Risk Drug Abuse Among Urban Youth

Papers and Presentations
Eiserman, J., Schensul, J., Pino, R., Burkholder, G., Singer, M. The Influence of MDMA on Sex Behavior of Urban Youth and Young Adults. Special session entitled Dancing with Drugs, organized by Jean J. Schensul and Merrill Singer, held at the Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting, Merida, Mexico, 2001.

Huebner, C., Singer, M., Schensul, J., Eiserman, J., Burkholder, G. Urban Youth, "Club Drugs", and Party Culture. Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting, Merida, Mexico, 2001.

Schensul, J., Singer, M. Dancing with Drugs: Urban Youth, Club Drugs and Sex Risk. Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting, Merida, Mexico, 2001.

Pino, R., Burkholder, G., Schensul, J. Self-Reported STIs in Urban Youth Networks: A Call for Research and Intervention. American Public Health Association Annual Meeting, 2001.