There is no author summary for this article yet. Authors can add summaries to their articles on ScienceOpen to make them more accessible to a non-specialist audience.
Abstract
This article uses qualitative interviews with 53 problematic drug users who had dropped
out of treatment in England, UK to explore how they describe the stigmatisation of
drug users and drug services. It discusses the construction of the category of the
junkie through its association with un-controlled heroin use and criminality. It shows
how some drug users carefully manage information about their discreditable identities
by excluding themselves from this category, while acknowledging its validity for other
drug users. The junkie identity was generally seen as shameful and therefore to be
avoided, although it holds attractions for some drug users. For many of the interviewees,
entry to treatment risked exposing their own activities as shaming, as they saw treatment
as being a place that was populated by junkies and where it becomes more difficult
to manage discreditable information. The treatment regime, e.g. the routine of supervised
consumption of methadone, was itself seen by some as stigmatising and was also seen
as hindering progress to the desired 'normal' life of conventional employment. Participation
in the community of users of both drugs and drug services was perceived as potentially
damaging to the prospects of recovery. This emphasises the importance of social capital,
including links to people and opportunities outside the drug market. It also highlights
the danger that using the criminal justice system to concentrate prolific offenders
in treatment may have the perverse effects of excluding other people who have drug
problems and of prolonging the performance of the junkie identity within treatment
services. It is concluded that treatment agencies should address these issues, including
through the provision of more drug services in mainstream settings, in order to ensure
that drug services are not seen to be suitable only for one particularly stigmatised
category of drug user.