Alcohol use and motivations for drinking among types of young adult illicit stimulant users / Ellen Leslie ... [et al.]

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Publication details:
Canberra : Australian Institute of Criminology, 2016.
Record id:
87408
Series:
Trends and issues in crime and criminal justice ; no. 515.
Subject:
Methamphetamine abuse -- Australia.
Alcohol and drug abuse -- Australia.
Youth -- Alcohol use -- Australia.
Summary:
Drinking among young adult users of amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) during episodes of ecstasy and methamphetamine use is reported to have a number of possible functions, such as mitigating the unwanted effects of the drugs, enhancing intoxication and pleasure, and increasing drinking capacity. While there is evidence to suggest a high prevalence of risky drinking among users of ATS in Australia, little is known about how they combine their use of ATS with the consumption of alcohol or why they do so. This paper considers how ATS users consume alcohol during ecstasy and methamphetamine use, and also addresses alcohol abuse and dependence among low-risk and at-risk ATS users. At-risk users are more likely to have experienced alcohol abuse and dependence during adolescence or early adulthood, suggesting that higher-risk use of ATS may be linked with problematic drinking patterns. The paper suggests that problematic behaviour relating to alcohol and ATS use is interlinked, and may be important in developing appropriate policy responses.
Note:
Title from title caption of PDF document (viewed on February 8, 2017).
"December 2016".
Includes bibliographical references.
ISSN:
1836-2206
0817-8542
Phys. description:
1 online resource.