Drug Abuse and Treident of Health Complications
among Dancing
Mravčík V.1, Valnoha J.2, Škařupová K.3
Národní monitorovací středisko pro drogy a drogové závislosti, Praha1 Sdružení Podané ruce. Program Prevence zneužívání syntetických drog. Terénní programy. Brno2 FSS MU, katedra sociologie (studentka), Brno3 |
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Summary:
The goal: The survey mapped drug use in the dance setting and health consequences of the dancers.
Method: Participants of the dance parties who utilised preventive and harm reduction services in
the dance parties provided by NGOs filled-in one page questionnaire in 2003. The questionnaire
aimed at life-time prevalence and intensive (3 times and more) use in the last 30 days as well as lifetime
prevalence of selected health consequences ant their causes. Frequency analysis and analysis
of possible relations between health consequences and recent intensive drug use (expressed as
ODDS ratio) have been carried out. Findings: The sample consists of 468 dancers in 25 dance parties,
330 of them (70.5%) men and 138 (29.5%) women. The maximum of respondents was in the age
group of 15–19 years (46.6%), the main age was 21 and 19 years for men and women respectively.
Pupils, secondary school and university students for med 49.1% of the sample; 6.8% of the sample
were unemployed. Lifetime prevalence of ecstasy was 90.4%, that of cannabis 91.2%, 53.0% of pervitin
(methamphetamine) and other amphetamines, 7.7% of heroin, 17.5% cocaine and 51.7% hallucinogens.
Ecstasy was used by 26.7%, cannabis by 55.1%, pervitin (methamhetamine) and other amphetamines
by 15.6%, heroin by 1.5%, cocaine by 2.1% and hallucinogens by 8.8% of the sample three
times or more in the last 30 days. One third of individuals in the sample used more then one of the
selected substances three times or more frequently in the last 30 days. Individuals without any experience
with ecstasy use represented 9.6% of the sample; it means that these contacted preventive and
harm-reduction services even before their first ecstasy use. Health consequences related to the dance party were reported by app. 30% of respondents, app. 4% of respondents then contacted the medical
service. The most frequently reported health consequences were ill-being, headache, nausea,
emesis, heart palpitation and anxiety. Heat, exhaustion, excessive drug use and poly-drug use were
mostly reported as reasons of the health consequences. Intensive use of ecstasy, cannabis, pervitin
(methamphetamine) and other amphetamines, hallucinogens and poly-drug use have been identified
as statistically significant predictive factors of party-related health consequences in the life.
Conclusion: The survey confirmed high prevalence of drug use among party dancers. Preventive and
harm-reduction services on the dance setting are appropriate tool for drug use and its risks at the
dance setting. The survey has shown that these services target also the users before their first ecstasy
use, who are the most vulnerable group from the drug-related health risks point of view.
Key words:
dance setting, dance drugs, drug use, ecstasy, MDMA, health consequences.
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