Consumption of Substances in Nightlife Settings: A Qualitative Approach in Young Andalusians (Spain)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Sample/Participants
2.3. Recruitment Process
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Validity
2.7. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Participants
3.2. Motivation. What Are They Looking for When They Consume?
R8: “I’d say that drugs, apart from freeing you from your inhibitions and problems, make you feel superior, they make you feel like you’re God.” (R21, R23)
R14: “There, all my mates who usually meet up smoke—we all smoke. We started smoking together and it’s not like I’m going to get addicted, no. One of my mates comes along one day, we get together, he always rolls a joint and that’s it.” (R22)
EE2: “At times in class when the subject comes up, they say they smoke joints because it relaxes them.”
EE5: “They do it to be accepted by the group, we see that at school too.”
3.3. Polyconsumption. Alcohol, Tobacco, Cannabis… and What Else?
R29: “The substance young people consume most, after alcohol and tobacco, is cannabis. To a lesser extent, pills and cocaine.”
R3: “So much cocaine, joints, MDMA, pills… pot, GHB (…). The liquid ecstasy thing I told you about. (…) I mixed it with more drugs. I mixed it that night with MDMA, with Speed, with cocaine… when I went out I didn’t just use one drug, maybe I mixed several.” (R3, R4a, R4b, R5a, R12, R13, R19, R24).
R41: “It’s a pill that makes your mouth really dry and makes you quite dizzy, because as people don’t buy alcoholic drinks, but they go there to take the drugs, the clubs are now forced to sell bottles of water for twelve euros.”
EE1: “The most common substance is cannabis, consumed at breaks or outside the classroom (…) they talk to each other before starting the class, and on some occasions I’ve heard how they pool their money to buy alcohol, and even a kind of powder.”
EE2: “Tobacco and hashish in the breaks, and when they come in and out of the school.”
HPE1: “Alcohol, cannabis, marijuana and pills.”
R6: “Do you know what it is? A cough syrup that has codeine in it, which is something, let’s see, how can I tell you… it has a substance that’s also found in heroin. And that’s in the cough syrup to sooth your cough. You mix that with Sprite and you drink it with ice, and it gives you a high like a reefer, and it tastes good too.” (R5b, R8.)
HC1: “I couldn’t tell what the typical profile is: we deal with young polyconsumers with very diverse characteristics, although they tend to be young people with a low level of purchasing power and culture and who tend to come from unstructured families.”
HC2: “I don’t think there’s a typical profile; many young people today are polyconsumers without seeming that way.”
R16: “I can go out without having to smoke—like playing, going to training, or going to a party and not smoking. It’s not something I depend on. I like doing it, but I’m not addicted to it. In fact, people consider marijuana a drug, I don’t consider it as a drug because tobacco is a drug too.”
R19: “Who doesn’t like temptation? But I control myself, I know that it’s bad for me and I don’t do it.”
R32: “For me, marijuana is something that I think will be around for the rest of my life, I don’t know, I can’t deny it.”
3.4. Gender. Does It Influence Polyconsumption?
R2: “Boys smoke more cigarettes and girls more joints.” (R1, R4)
R35: “It doesn’t matter if you’re a woman or a man. It could be that it affects women more… you know what I mean, it’s more or less similar, but for each person, each substance is different.”
EE2: “The consumption we can see here in the school is not a reflection of what they may have taken at the weekend or at night.”
EE4: “I’m not sure… they don’t usually tell us what they do when they speak in class, but then, first thing Monday morning is crazy-as they see you as a young person, they tell you about it, and I can sometimes hardly believe what I hear.”
3.5. How Do They Obtain the Substances?
R7b: “Not other things, but unfortunately drugs are everywhere and you can get whatever you want.”
R22: “If I have weed and I have it to spare, I sell it and make a bit of cash.”
R2: “There are certain people we know who are the typical pushers, the ones who always sell everything, and yes, they drop by.” (R18, R7a, R24)
EE4: “As the class starts or when you leave, a typical group forms, and they talk about people they buy from”… I heard once, “Go on, send him a WhatsApp and get him to save us some.”
EE5: “They have several, and I once heard “Well, if X doesn’t have any, we’ll get the car and go to Y.” Another one answered, “Yes but that one’s more expensive and I’m broke.””
EE3: “Colleagues and drug pushers.”
EE5: “Friends and family.”
3.6. Places. Who Do They Do It with and Where?
R3: “We’ve been smoking in a park or quietly at someone’s house.”
R36: “For example, where I work…the people…in the bathroom we’ve seen little bags, so I asked my workmates what they were and they said “Well, that’s the people, they sometimes come here to the bars and take drugs..” Because once I saw an older girl having a beer who was falling asleep like that and I said “What’s up with this one?” Then they said “She’s been to the bathroom…” and I was like, “OK, right!”
HC1: “We see these young people mainly at homes, or in the street.”
HC2: “In my case, I see them at the health center.”
HC1: “We don’t go there, but I don’t think it’s necessary.”
HC2: “There isn’t, but it would be a good idea.”
HC3: “No, we don’t go there, we’re at the emergency wards and that’s where they usually are. In other cities like Ibiza, there are health staff at the clubs, but not here yet.”
EE1: “On Friday when I leave work in the afternoon-evening, there’s an open field nearby, and they’re in the car with music and drinking, the other days of the week I don’t see them, some of them even go to our school.”
EE3: “As the weekend approaches, consumption seems to increase, and their attitude is usually a bit more laid back/slower.”
EE5: “Here at college we hear about university parties on Thursdays and Fridays. There are students who sell tickets with a free drink.”
EE4: “Especially on Thursdays, there are parties that they organize themselves… They talk about the ‘botellones’ (large groups of young people drinking in public places) and what each one is going to buy when the weekend comes.” (EE10, EE11).
3.7. Effects. Unpleasant Experiences and Negative Effects.
R11: “The most I’ve ever smoked was thirty joints. But I dropped dead that day.” (R2a)
R13: “I tried it in cakes and things like that, but it was too strong, so I don’t want to try it anymore… I remember being in bed, because I was in my house, lying on the bed as if I was asleep but I couldn’t react, although I could hear everything. I don’t know, it was just too much, so I don’t want to do it anymore.”
R9: “Mix any drug with alcohol, and all hell breaks loose.” (R2b)
R27: “When you take x substances what it does is… it doubles or triples whatever you feel… everything, so, it doubles or triples the violence, doubles or triples your sex-drive, but alcohol already does that, doesn’t it? That’s another drug, the only thing that it’s legal (Laughs). But these substances do it to you too.”
HP2: “They turn to friends, older relatives, and finally their parents.”
HP3: “They know the risks, but they follow the tribe.”
HC1: “Care usually consists of monitoring, knowledge of the clinical situation, stabilization, and assessment whether to transfer them to hospital.”
HC3: “It’s hardly ever done… it’s always through primary care consultations, and in more serious cases, through Detoxification Centers.”
HC4: “No follow-up, an emergency is dealt with, and that’s it.”
3.8. Promotion, Prevention and Action
HC2: “[We run] workshops in schools, with the emphasis on primary care consultation.”
HC4: “Information on posters.”
EE1: “I have no training” (EE4–EE8; EE10)
EE3: “None. The only training I’ve had is my experience in life”
EE1: “There’s no specific plan. The only things in the Regulations are the type of punishments for consuming drugs in the school (the sanctions model).”
EE5: “We have no prevention programs: the problem’s just addressed by dealing with cross-curricular subjects such as healthy living habits, physical exercise, anatomy or topics which lend themselves to making comparisons between healthy and harmful substances due to addiction, etc.”
HP1: “I get training from my health district training unit.”
HP4: “Courses, scientific publications… I’m qualified in the Methadone Program, ‘Proyecto Hombre.” (‘Proyecto Hombre’ is a project set up in Spain in 1984 which tackles addiction, from prevention to treatment, rehabilitation and reinsertion into society/work. https://proyectohombre.es/quienes-somos/#:~:text=Proyecto%20Hombre,as%C3%AD%20como%20a%20sus%20familias.&text=Tambi%C3%A9n%20trabaja%20en%20la%20prevenci%C3%B3n,de%20un%20mill%C3%B3n%20de%20personas.)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Themes | Verbatim |
---|---|
Influence of gender on polyconsumption | R1: “A friend of mine’s brother, too, I don’t know, he must be about 15 years old or so, I was in the ‘botellón’ as well and when we realized a pill had been slipped into his drink, a fifteen-year-old boy […] but come on, when they do that kind of thing it’s usually to women, so we were really shocked.” R4: “There I can tell you that maybe sixty percent or more of guys smoke. I think that more than anything they do it because of the feeling of superiority, “I smoke so I look older”. I’ve seen kids here who are thirteen and fourteen years old smoking, just because they think they look older.” |
Motivations to consume | R23: “When I smoke, I turn into a person who stares at people.” R21: “For me, smoking joints takes me up to a higher plane, I don’t know how to explain it.” R22: “I’m cool, cool, chilled. I’m still the same, but it’s a thing that gives me a lift. You have to try it to know what it’s like.” |
Types of substances consumed | R12: “Yesterday like this, I had one. Let’s see, I took marijuana, a type that makes you double- or triple-high. I mean, when you have a plant, you have the buds, there’s the hashish, then there’s the hash oil, which is extracted from the leaves, which is an oil, and that also gets you really high, and then there’s what you cut with the scissors, what you have left is the resin.” R13: “It stays on your scissors. You cut it and the resin sticks to the scissors. I had two of those yesterday, no, I had five yesterday.” R24: “I do what I can. If I have a sativa, I smoke a sativa, if I have indica, I smoke an indica… I like marijuana.” R4a: “I’ve tried Speed, MDMA, ecstasy, cocaine and that’s it.” R5a: “Well, I’ve also tried the mushrooms (…)” R19: “To try them I’d like to try them all (…)” R3: “A weird “hangover in Vegas” type of pill.” R4b: “A boy from my village, a mate of mine, said “Look what I’ve got, this pill”. I looked it up and I liked what I read and tried it.” R5b: “I’ve also tried codeine.” R8: “Since it’s a medicine, if you take it too much, you can get a stomach ache and go into a coma. I’ve taken diazepam and little else.” R1: “Maybe at some time, so I can know what it feels like, but I’m afraid I’ll like it.” (difference between “safe” consumption and “addiction”). |
Effects. Unpleasant experiences and negative effects. | R2a: I tried joints, but I’m not… I’m not into that anymore, you know what I mean? I don’t consume, but I know the effect it has on you and I know that it doesn’t… honestly what it leaves you is sleepy, sitting there feeling drowsy, I don’t know how to explain it to you (…). R2b: I think aggression is related to alcohol, not the other stuff. R7a: Either by pushers that we knew or… or we were going to Almanjayar, or Churriana or… there are a lot of places. |
Places to buy the different substances | R24: “If I want to get some in the city, I’ll go to Charica, which is in the Albaicin. Yeah, if I want to score in my village, either I talk to Perti or Bola - one or the other, and that’s it.” R18a: “For marijuana, I just talk to a pusher and he’s like “I’ve got some stuff.” |
How do they get the substances? | R21: “His dad sells it, so he gets the weed from his dad, sells it, smokes it, or gets the coke from his dad and takes that.” R18b: “But not codeine, for example. You don’t get that from a pusher, I don’t know any pushers that sell codeine yet. You buy that at the pharmacy, you say “I need cough medicine”, and they give it to you, maybe they say “you need a prescription” and maybe you can get one, or maybe not.” |
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1. Sociodemographic data: age, gender, origin (environment/city), habitual consumption. |
2. Themes 2.1. Recreational and leisure environment:
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2.2. Patterns of recreational drug use.
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1. Sociodemographic data: age, gender, origin (environment/city), scope: health (health promotion and health care), and education. |
2. Themes: 2.1. Approach from education
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2.2. Approach from health promotion
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2.3. Approach from health care
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García-Carpintero-Muñoz, M.Á.; Tarriño-Concejero, L.; de Diego-Cordero, R. Consumption of Substances in Nightlife Settings: A Qualitative Approach in Young Andalusians (Spain). Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 5646. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165646
García-Carpintero-Muñoz MÁ, Tarriño-Concejero L, de Diego-Cordero R. Consumption of Substances in Nightlife Settings: A Qualitative Approach in Young Andalusians (Spain). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(16):5646. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165646
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía-Carpintero-Muñoz, María Ángeles, Lorena Tarriño-Concejero, and Rocío de Diego-Cordero. 2020. "Consumption of Substances in Nightlife Settings: A Qualitative Approach in Young Andalusians (Spain)" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 16: 5646. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165646
APA StyleGarcía-Carpintero-Muñoz, M. Á., Tarriño-Concejero, L., & de Diego-Cordero, R. (2020). Consumption of Substances in Nightlife Settings: A Qualitative Approach in Young Andalusians (Spain). International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(16), 5646. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165646