Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia

Objective: To contrast service providers’ perceptions about crystalline methamphetamine (henceforth, ice) use and harm with information communicated in media reports and politicians’ statements. Design: In-depth semi structured interviews with service providers about the nature and extent of ice use...

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Main Authors: Cartwright, Kimberley, Tait, Robert
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74577
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author Cartwright, Kimberley
Tait, Robert
author_facet Cartwright, Kimberley
Tait, Robert
author_sort Cartwright, Kimberley
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: To contrast service providers’ perceptions about crystalline methamphetamine (henceforth, ice) use and harm with information communicated in media reports and politicians’ statements. Design: In-depth semi structured interviews with service providers about the nature and extent of ice use in the local community and its impact on individual services, clients and town life. Interviews were transcribed verbatim, manually analysed and coded around key themes, interpreted and independently cross-checked for context and accuracy. Setting: Two remote towns located in different states and territories operating as service hubs to very remote communities. Participants: Twenty-seven key service providers representing local organisations that engage with ice users and/or their families. Results: First, compared with alcohol, ice use and ice-related harm were insignificant at the two sites. Ice users were primarily high-earning and -functioning non-Australian Aboriginal tradesmen, and to a lesser extent, professionals and secondary school students. There were few Australian Aboriginal users. Ice was used to ‘party’, keep alert, and escape psychological distress. Second, the ‘Ice Destroys Lives’ campaign and references to an ‘ice epidemic’ amplified public anxiety about ice and ice-related harm in the surveyed communities. Third, the attention on ice distracted from the more extensive harm arising from alcohol use in their communities. Conclusion: The respondents questioned the notion of an ‘ice epidemic’ and the use of federal funding for ice-related initiatives in remote communities, especially while general alcohol and other drug services were under-resourced.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-745772020-02-03T06:46:44Z Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia Cartwright, Kimberley Tait, Robert Objective: To contrast service providers’ perceptions about crystalline methamphetamine (henceforth, ice) use and harm with information communicated in media reports and politicians’ statements. Design: In-depth semi structured interviews with service providers about the nature and extent of ice use in the local community and its impact on individual services, clients and town life. Interviews were transcribed verbatim, manually analysed and coded around key themes, interpreted and independently cross-checked for context and accuracy. Setting: Two remote towns located in different states and territories operating as service hubs to very remote communities. Participants: Twenty-seven key service providers representing local organisations that engage with ice users and/or their families. Results: First, compared with alcohol, ice use and ice-related harm were insignificant at the two sites. Ice users were primarily high-earning and -functioning non-Australian Aboriginal tradesmen, and to a lesser extent, professionals and secondary school students. There were few Australian Aboriginal users. Ice was used to ‘party’, keep alert, and escape psychological distress. Second, the ‘Ice Destroys Lives’ campaign and references to an ‘ice epidemic’ amplified public anxiety about ice and ice-related harm in the surveyed communities. Third, the attention on ice distracted from the more extensive harm arising from alcohol use in their communities. Conclusion: The respondents questioned the notion of an ‘ice epidemic’ and the use of federal funding for ice-related initiatives in remote communities, especially while general alcohol and other drug services were under-resourced. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74577 10.1111/ajr.12483 Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia fulltext
spellingShingle Cartwright, Kimberley
Tait, Robert
Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia
title Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia
title_full Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia
title_fullStr Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia
title_full_unstemmed Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia
title_short Service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote Australia
title_sort service providers’ experience of methamphetamine and the portrayal of the ‘ice epidemic’ in remote australia
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74577