2022
DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2022.2100926
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How the war on drugs impacts social determinants of health beyond the criminal legal system

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Cited by 61 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Our findings underscore how providing people like those in our study an adequate income and stable housing has the potential to positively impact their socioeconomic situation and their mental and physical health and well-being (Baxter et al, 2021;Coates & Cowgill, 2021). Nonetheless, as our findings highlight, the provision of adequate financial support and housing must be accompanied by responses that also tackle other underlying socioeconomic and structural drivers of illicit drug use (Cohen et al, 2022;Dasgupta et al, 2018). For example, for many participants, illicit drug consumption was the only mechanism they felt they had at their disposal to deal with the additional stresses of the pandemic, including isolation and boredom during lockdowns, challenges accessing scarce emergency food and housing services, being placed in overcrowded crisis housing and limited access to drug treatment (Coleman et al, 2022;Efunnuga et al, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Our findings underscore how providing people like those in our study an adequate income and stable housing has the potential to positively impact their socioeconomic situation and their mental and physical health and well-being (Baxter et al, 2021;Coates & Cowgill, 2021). Nonetheless, as our findings highlight, the provision of adequate financial support and housing must be accompanied by responses that also tackle other underlying socioeconomic and structural drivers of illicit drug use (Cohen et al, 2022;Dasgupta et al, 2018). For example, for many participants, illicit drug consumption was the only mechanism they felt they had at their disposal to deal with the additional stresses of the pandemic, including isolation and boredom during lockdowns, challenges accessing scarce emergency food and housing services, being placed in overcrowded crisis housing and limited access to drug treatment (Coleman et al, 2022;Efunnuga et al, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Our study fills an important gap in the literature about the positive and negative socioeconomic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated responses on the lives of a group of people who inject drugs and/or use methamphetamine. Findings underscore how health and well-being outcomes are inextricably bound to the socioeconomic environment (Cohen et al, 2022;Dasgupta et al, 2018;Ruiz et al, 2022) and, thus, that the impacts of pandemic restrictions go further than those involving drug-related harms or benefits. Our study also extends understandings of how, for socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, the pandemic increased existing inequities (Davidson et al, 2023;Delardas et al, 2022;Kent et al, 2022;Morante-García et al, 2022).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Even modern-day efforts such as Senator Cory Booker's EQUAL Act (2021) (Congress.gov, 2021, the most recent attempt to create racial parity in drug conviction sentencing, failed to pass in the Congress (Dillard & Wasson, 2022). The focus on law enforcement and incarceration rather than rehabilitation has intentionally created social consequences that undermine key determinants of health detailed by Cohen et al (2022), including education, employment, housing, and access to benefits. Room and Reuter (2012) argued that the UNSCND has constrained national policy experimentation because it requires nation states to criminalize drug use, and such experimentation would call for amendments of existing treaties, the formulation of new treaties, or the withdrawal of states from existing treaties.…”
Section: Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The focus on law enforcement and incarceration rather than rehabilitation has intentionally created social consequences that undermine key determinants of health detailed by Cohen et al. (2022), including education, employment, housing, and access to benefits.…”
Section: Historymentioning
confidence: 99%
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