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Cocaine use in Amsterdam II PDF

126 Pages·2001·0.76 MB·English
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TITLE Cohen, Peter, & Arjan Sas (1995), Cocaine use in Amsterdam II. Initiation and patterns of use after 1986. Amsterdam: Department of Human Geography, University of Amsterdam. © 1995 Peter Cohen & Arjan Sas. All rights reserved. URL of this document: http://www.cedro-uva.org/lib/cohen.cocaine2.pdf COCAINE USE IN AMSTERDAM II Initiation and patterns of use after 1986 Peter Cohen & Arjan Sas 1 COCAINE USE IN AMSTERDAM II Initiation and patterns of use after 1986 Peter Cohen Arjan Sas COCAINE USE IN AMSTERDAM II Initiation and patterns of use after 1986 Amsterdam, 1995 Department of Human Geography University of Amsterdam Nieuwe Prinsengracht 130 1018 VZ Amsterdam Netherlands Explanation of symbols . data not available - nil 0 (0.0) less than half of unit employed a blank category not applicable CIP-GEGEVENS KONINKLIJKE BIBLIOTHEEK, DEN HAAG Cohen, Peter Cocaine use in Amsterdam II : initiation and patterns of use after 1986 / Peter Cohen, Arjan Sas. - Amsterdam : Instituut voor Sociale Geografie, Universiteit van Amsterdam. - Ill. - (Onderzoekprogramma drugbeleid gemeente Amsterdam ; nr. 14) Met lit. opg. ISBN 90-6993-099-4 Trefw.: druggebruik ; Amsterdam ; onderzoek. Funded by the Ministry of Welfare, Public Health and Cultural Affairs Copyright © 1995 Peter Cohen & Arjan Sas Niets uit deze uitgave mag worden verveelvoudigd en/of openbaar gemaakt door middel van druk, fotokopie of op welke andere wijze ook zonder voorafgaande schriftelijke toestemming van de uitgever. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form of print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means without written permission from the publisher. Lay-out: Arjan Sas Printed by Elinkwijk Utrecht Cover: Stadsdrukkerij van Amsterdam Contents Contents Preface 9 1 Introduction, conclusion, and eight chapter summaries 11 Introduction 11 Conclusion 13 Chapter summaries 14 2 The sample 14 3 Initiation into the use of cocaine 15 4 Level of use through time 16 5 Routes of ingestion, other drug use, price and purity of cocaine 17 6 Rules applied to the use of cocaine 17 7 Advantages, disadvantages and effects of cocaine 18 8 Craving cocaine, extra activities to obtain it, cocaine’s effects on work and relations 20 Notes 20 2 The sample 21 2.1 Introduction 21 The snowball sample of 1991 21 Selecting zero stages 22 The snow ball chains 24 2.2 Comparison of snowball sample with cocaine users from the household survey 26 A sub sample of cocaine users from the 1990/1991 household survey 26 Age 28 Gender 28 Nationality 29 Income 30 Children living at home 31 Partner situation 32 Education 32 Contacts with drug treatment institutions 33 2.3 Comparison of the 1987 and 1991 snowball samples on some demo- graphic and socio-economic variables 33 Notes 36 5 Cocaine use in Amsterdam II 3 Initiation into cocaine use 37 4 Level of use through time 40 Introduction 40 4.1 “Typical” dosage at “typical” occasions in different phases 40 4.2 Minimum and maximum dosage during last four weeks prior to interview 41 4.3 Frequency of ingestion during a “typical” month of use 44 4.4 Level of use 44 4.5 Time intervals between stages of use, age, duration of top period, and pattern of use over time 49 Distribution of use over a typical week and over a typical occasion of use 53 4.6 Periods of abstinence and quitting cocaine use 54 Quitting cocaine use 58 Notes 59 5 Routes of ingestion, combinations with other drugs, and buying, price, and purity of cocaine in Amsterdam 61 Introduction 61 5.1 Methods of ingestion 61 5.2 Cocaine, other drugs, and their combined use 64 5.3 Cocaine purity and price, cocaine buying in 1991 66 Notes 68 6 Informal rules applied to the use of cocaine 70 Introduction 70 6.1 Situations (settings) in which cocaine use occurs 70 6.2 Emotional states (sets) for cocaine use 72 6.3 Financial limits on cocaine purchases per month 74 6.4 Advice to novice users 74 6.5 Preferred cocaine policy 78 6.6 Self reported rules 80 Notes 81 7 Advantages, disadvantages, and effects of cocaine 82 Introduction 82 7.1 Cocaine’s advantages 82 7.2 Cocaine’s disadvantages 83 7.3 Effects of cocaine 85 Prevalence of cocaine effects 87 Scales of (adverse) effects and clustering effects 92 Differential effect clustering, user types and shifts of user type over time 94 Notes 95 6 Contents 8 Craving cocaine and activities to obtain it; cocaine’s effects on work and relations 96 Introduction 96 8.1 Craving and obsession 96 8.2 Extra sources of income in order to buy cocaine 97 8.3 Effects of cocaine use on work and personal relations 98 Literature 101 Cocaine Use in Amsterdam in Non Deviant Subcultures 104 Methodology 105 Characteristics of community based cocaine users in Amsterdam 107 General Characteristics 107 Other Drug Use 108 Cocaine Use 108 Initiation and Level of Use through Time 108 Effects, Advantages and Disadvantages of Cocaine 112 Loss of Control 115 The Follow-Up Study 117 Developments in Cocaine Use of Follow-up Respondents 118 Price and Quality of Cocaine 121 Settings of Cocaine Use 121 Rules of Use 122 Advice to Novice Users 122 Conclusions 123 References 124 Notes 125 7 Cocaine use in Amsterdam II 8 Preface Preface In an area where anecdote, press impressions and data from treatment institu- tions are still the major sources of knowledge about cocaine, data that run counter to dominant notions have to be presented with great detail. This enables the reader to check our conclusions as much as possible. However, we realize that the level of detail we present in this study goes far beyond the needs of most readers. For them, we have added a special Chapter 1 that covers the main findings in a summary format. In this report we try to describe 108 persons who on average started their regular cocaine use career in 1985 or later. The report is a sequel to our first cocaine use investigation (Cohen, 1989), hence the title “Cocaine use in Amsterdam II”1. Main goal of the second investigation was to find out whether cocaine had remained attractive to the same type of persons as found by us in 1987, or that changed publicity about the drug had modified both type of users and patterns of use. To give the reader of this report an impression of all our efforts to investigate cocaine use in Amsterdam, we reprinted an overview article first published in Addiction Research, 1994, Vol 2. In this article we present a general overview of all our findings, including the results of the follow up study we performed on 64 of the respondents we first interviewed in 1987. The publication of “Cocaine use in Amsterdam II” marks the end of the cocaine use studies we started in 1987. This relatively large project was made possible by a lot of persons, of whom we would like to mention Eddy Engelsman in the first place. His knowledge of the drug field provided us with the backing we needed in order to acquire funding from the Ministry of Welfare, Public Health and Cultural Affairs. Further we would like to thank Paul Sandwijk, Harry van Kesteren and Tom Verhoek of the Stichting BRON2 for their impeccable organization of the field work and interviewer instruction. Harm ‘t Hart was as always an encyclopedic source of methodological and statistical advice, any time we needed it. We thank Lynn Zimmer Ph.D. and John Morgan Ph.D. for the generosity of spending a lot of time to editing the English text and for the valuable remarks he made on the unedited version of this report. Last, but not least, we have to thank our interviewers. Their zeal and integrity made it possible to process a lot of good data, of which very little was ‘missing’. 9 Ten years of cocaine Between Arjan Sas and Peter Cohen a consistent division of labor emerged that gave the former almost supreme reign over data processing and the countless and sometimes very complicated SPSS runs we needed. The latter however remained fully responsible for the text and the over all product. Arjan Sas Peter Cohen April 1995 1 This report was presented to the Ministry of Welfare, Public Health and Cultural Affairs in July 1994 who funded our series of cocaine use investigations in Amsterdam from 1987 to 1991. The present version is modified, according to the editing comments of Zimmer and Morgan. 2 The “BRON Foundation” is a small research institution attached to the department of Human Geography of the University of Amsterdam. 10

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2.2 Comparison of snowball sample with cocaine users from the .. pharmacokinetic characteristics of cocaine, on routes of ingestion, on age, on.
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