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The relationship between cryptomarket drug purchase, social networks and adverse drug events: A cross-sectional study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 13:20 authored by Leigh Coney, Amy Peacock, Aili Malm, Rasmus Munksgaard, Judith Aldridge, Jason Ferris, Larissa Maier, Adam Winstock, Monica BarrattMonica Barratt
Introduction: Drug use and trading are typically social activities; however, supply through cryptomarkets can occur without any in-person social contact. People who use drugs alone may be at higher risk of experiencing harms, for example, due to lack of others who may call for emergency assistance. Alternatively, cryptomarkets may be a source of harm reduction information and drugs with better-known content and dose, potentially reducing the risk of adverse events. This study examines relationships between cryptomarket use, drug-using social networks and adverse drug events for MDMA, cocaine and LSD. Method: A subsample of 23,053 respondents from over 70 countries was collected in the 2018 Global Drug Survey. People who reported using MDMA, cocaine or LSD were asked about using cryptomarkets to purchase these drugs; any adverse drug events requiring medical treatment (combining seeking treatment and should have sought treatment but did not); and social networks who they had used the specific drug with. All measures referred to the last 12 months, hereon referred to as ‘recent’. Binary logistic regressions examined relationships between cryptomarket use, drug-using social networks, and adverse drug events, controlling for age, gender, and frequency of drug use. Results: Adverse events from any drug type were low (5.2%) and for each drug; MDMA (3.5%); cocaine (3.3%); and LSD (3.5%). After controlling for covariates, recent cryptomarket use was associated with increased likelihood of having no drug-using network for each drug type. People who recently used cryptomarkets were more likely to report adverse cocaine (AOR = 1.70 (1.22-2.37)) and LSD (AOR = 1.58 (1.12-2.09)) events. For those reporting a network size >1, network characteristics did not differ with recent cryptomarket use; however, those reporting recent cryptomarket use were more likely to report adverse LSD events (AOR = 1.86 (0.99-3.51)). Conclusion: People who reported purchasing drugs from cryptomarkets

Funding

Drugs on the darknet: Assessing the global health risks of a rapidly expanding market

National Health and Medical Research Council

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History

Journal

International Journal of Drug Policy

Volume

123

Number

104258

Start page

1

End page

9

Total pages

9

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Former Identifier

2006128509

Esploro creation date

2024-03-07

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