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      Drugs of Abuse and Novel Psychoactive Substances at Outdoor Music Festivals in Colorado

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          Abstract

          Background

          Drugs of abuse (DOA) are widely used in the United States and are ubiquitous at outdoor music festivals. Attendees at music festivals are at high-risk for novel psychoactive substance (NPS) use, which is becoming more prevalent worldwide. No U.S. studies have employed an qualitative approach to investigate the etiologies of both traditional DOA and NPS use amongst music festival attendees.

          Objectives

          The objective of this study was to improve understanding of the knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, and practices of festival attendees using NPS and DOA.

          Methods

          We conducted semi-structured interviews of 171 attendees during the Sonic Bloom and Arise music festivals in Colorado in 2015 and 2016. Discrete variables were summarized with descriptive statistics. The anonymous, multi-domain interview documented the knowledge, attitudes beliefs, and practices underlying DOA use, which were analyzed with qualitative methods.

          Results

          We enrolled 171 participants that endorsed DOA use at the festivals. Most were experienced DOA users, who perceived minimal risks associated with DOA and NPS use. Nearly all unanimously reported normalization of DOA at music festivals. Participants popularly cited empathogenic, entactogenic, and entheogenic effects of DOA as their primary motivations for use. NPS use was endorsed by 39.8% ( n = 68) of respondents, all of whom identified as being experienced DOA users.

          Conclusions

          This population of novel psychoactive substance users is primarily composed of experienced drug users that endorsed use because of low cost, minimal perceived risk, accessibility, and normalization of drug use at music festivals.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9602153
          20344
          Subst Use Misuse
          Subst Use Misuse
          Substance use & misuse
          1082-6084
          1532-2491
          5 December 2017
          17 November 2017
          07 June 2018
          07 June 2018
          : 53
          : 7
          : 1203-1211
          Affiliations
          [a ]University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA
          [b ]Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina, USA
          [c ]University of Colorado School of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, USA
          [d ]Groove Medical Services, Inc., Aurora, Colorado, USA
          [e ]Rocky Mountain Poison & Drug Center, Denver Health and Hospital Authority, Denver, Colorado, USA
          Author notes
          CONTACT Andrew A. Monte, MD, drew.monte@ 123456ucdenver.edu , University of Colorado School of Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine Aurora, CO 80045, USA
          Article
          PMC5935531 PMC5935531 5935531 nihpa924537
          10.1080/10826084.2017.1400067
          5935531
          29148866
          79463add-ac8f-48b9-b6a6-32d4b799fa26
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Novel psychoactive substance,ethnography,drugs of abuse,music festival,harm reduction,festival medicine,substance abuse,synthetic cannabinoid,2C,kratom,synthetic opioid,qualitative

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