SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Tutorial 5
Health networks
Curtis, R., Friedman, A., Neaigus, B., Jose, B., Goldstein, M. and Ildefonso, G. (1995)
‘Street-level drug markets: network structure and HIV risk’, Social Networks 17:
229–49.
Observations and survey. Interviews with a selected sample of the participant
who agreed to talk.
Define and situate three categories of injecting drug users (IDUs) - a core, an
inner periphery and an outer periphery - in a street-level drug market scene
in Bushwick, a NY area (originally settled by the Dutch…).
Data from ethnographic fieldwork were used to define a 'core' network of
IDUs, and a formal survey was used to collect data about social ties among
local IDUs. 'Inner‘ and 'outer' peripheral groups are defined in terms of the
presence or absence of direct links to the core.
Different locations in these network structures were associated with different
levels of AIDS risk behaviours and of HIV infection rates.

QL



QN
Method
Ethnographic fieldwork, hundreds of drug users (including many non-injectors)
were contacted and observed by the ethnographic staff. The fieldwork generated
several hundred pages of observational notes as well as 210 open-ended interviews
with 68 drug users in the neighborhood.
Structured independent interviews with 767 IDUs were completed in the
project's storefront, and HIV-antibody tests were done on 90% of them.
Questions in the structured interviews which asked respondents to name and
describe their injection partners during the 30 days prior to the interview.
A link between two people is established:
• When a network member arrived at the research storefront accompanied by the
index subject, the pair was considered to be linked
• Through a field link in which the subject pointed out a nominated contact to a
research staff member;
• Through ethnographic observation (i.e. two subjects being seen together in a social
or drug-related interaction by the project's ethnographic staff);
• Through matching a number of key descriptive variables of nominated injecting
network members in the study's field data base (e.g. age within 5 years, first name
or nickname, height within 3 inches, ethnic group, etc.)
Large and heterogeneous 'core network' of street-level drug users in the
neighborhood.
The core network was defined by using two types of ethnographically generated
data: observations and self-reports from drug users and distributors. The most
important criterion for inclusion in the core network was validation by other core
network members.
Criteria of inclusion:
• sharing drugs
• drug distributors also contributed to the definition of core network members,
by giving out free sample of a new brand to core members who were likely to
share with others
• Periphery members seek the assistance of core network members to help
them buy drugs (especially heroin) as well as to gain access to local places
where they could use drugs.
40 members of the core network from an eligible sample of 767 IDUs.
Tutorial 5
Any IDU in the formal survey who was not a member of our identified 'core network' was
considered a member of the periphery. The periphery included, among others
(a) people who lived in the neighborhood but were only occasional users of street-level drugs
(b) local residents who used street-level drugs every day but kept strictly to themselves and
used them in the privacy of their homes
(c) daily users who came from other neighborhoods to buy for themselves and their friends
but who did not spend much time in Bushwick.
Members of the inner periphery were primarily defined as
• Those non-core IDUs who said that they had shared drugs locally with at least one member
of the core network within 30 days prior to being interviewed.
• Those named by core network members as injection partners.
95 members of the inner periphery were identified with the structured interviews
The drug-use levels of many core group members were sustained through a
combination of their own income-generating activities (e.g. selling works, stealing,
welfare, panhandling, etc.) and through sharing drugs with members of the inner
periphery who were dependent upon core network members for market information,
purchasing assistance and/or providing a local site to use drugs before leaving the
neighborhood.
Members of the 'outer' periphery were defined in this research as drug injectors
who did not inject with core network members.
Members of the outer periphery tended to make their own purchases and use
drugs in the privacy of their homes.
Since they tended not to 'hang out' in the vicinity of local drug markets or drug-using
locations, relatively few ethnographic field observations were made of the outer
periphery.
Although many were recruited for the structured interviews, which were conducted in
the privacy of the research project's storefront, few members of the outer periphery
wanted to talk on the street.

More Related Content

PPTX
Harrisburg university
PPTX
Lecture 3
ODP
Nelson mandela nithya 1
PPTX
Workshop 6
PPTX
Tutorial 1
PPTX
Lecture 2
PPTX
Lecture 7
PPTX
Lecture 6
Harrisburg university
Lecture 3
Nelson mandela nithya 1
Workshop 6
Tutorial 1
Lecture 2
Lecture 7
Lecture 6

Viewers also liked (11)

PPTX
O falce di luna calante
PDF
Case study 8 - Hanover Public Systems
PPTX
Lecture 1
PPTX
Lecture 9
PPT
Napoleone fra rivoluzione e restaurazione
PPTX
Lecture 5
PPTX
Course description
PPTX
Presentazione cami marghe roby sharlene
PPTX
Politiche europee
PPTX
Euro 4
PPTX
Le istituzioni europee
O falce di luna calante
Case study 8 - Hanover Public Systems
Lecture 1
Lecture 9
Napoleone fra rivoluzione e restaurazione
Lecture 5
Course description
Presentazione cami marghe roby sharlene
Politiche europee
Euro 4
Le istituzioni europee
Ad

Similar to Tutorial 5 (20)

PPTX
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...
PDF
Mobilizing the House/Ball Community around Preventative and Therapeutic HIV C...
PPT
The responsibility to protect and the need to affect change: undocumented mi...
PPT
Outcomes Measures for Sexual Minority Patients in an Opioid Treatment Program
PPTX
Sy4 research methods A2
DOCX
Out There The Ecology of Addiction in Drug Abuse Treat.docx
PPT
Who Can Speak for the Emergently Ill 11.10.08
PPTX
Applications of SNA Week 4: Health networks
PDF
Public perception of newspaper adherence to ethical principles in the reporta...
PDF
Public perception of newspaper adherence to ethical principles in the reporta...
PDF
Engaging Patients in Research and Tool Development
PDF
Correcting Over 50 Years of Tobacco Industry Misinformation
PDF
Library Enhancement through the Wisdom of Crowds
PDF
Using a Service Sector Segmented Approach to Identify (suicide prevention art...
PDF
Ethical Considerations for a Public Health Response Using Molecular HIV Surve...
PDF
Intenews Survey of Ukrainian Journalsits 2012 English Report
PDF
Sampling and Estimation in Hidden Populations.pdf
00 Networks of People Who Use Opiods Nonmedically: Reports from Rural Souther...
Mobilizing the House/Ball Community around Preventative and Therapeutic HIV C...
The responsibility to protect and the need to affect change: undocumented mi...
Outcomes Measures for Sexual Minority Patients in an Opioid Treatment Program
Sy4 research methods A2
Out There The Ecology of Addiction in Drug Abuse Treat.docx
Who Can Speak for the Emergently Ill 11.10.08
Applications of SNA Week 4: Health networks
Public perception of newspaper adherence to ethical principles in the reporta...
Public perception of newspaper adherence to ethical principles in the reporta...
Engaging Patients in Research and Tool Development
Correcting Over 50 Years of Tobacco Industry Misinformation
Library Enhancement through the Wisdom of Crowds
Using a Service Sector Segmented Approach to Identify (suicide prevention art...
Ethical Considerations for a Public Health Response Using Molecular HIV Surve...
Intenews Survey of Ukrainian Journalsits 2012 English Report
Sampling and Estimation in Hidden Populations.pdf
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
PDF
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
PDF
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
PPTX
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
PDF
احياء السادس العلمي - الفصل الثالث (التكاثر) منهج متميزين/كلية بغداد/موهوبين
PPTX
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
PPTX
Virtual and Augmented Reality in Current Scenario
PDF
My India Quiz Book_20210205121199924.pdf
PPTX
20th Century Theater, Methods, History.pptx
PDF
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
PPTX
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
PPTX
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
PPTX
Computer Architecture Input Output Memory.pptx
PDF
AI-driven educational solutions for real-life interventions in the Philippine...
PDF
Weekly quiz Compilation Jan -July 25.pdf
PDF
Environmental Education MCQ BD2EE - Share Source.pdf
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
PDF
Paper A Mock Exam 9_ Attempt review.pdf.
PDF
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
PDF
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes
Introduction to pro and eukaryotes and differences.pptx
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
A powerpoint presentation on the Revised K-10 Science Shaping Paper
احياء السادس العلمي - الفصل الثالث (التكاثر) منهج متميزين/كلية بغداد/موهوبين
Chinmaya Tiranga Azadi Quiz (Class 7-8 )
Virtual and Augmented Reality in Current Scenario
My India Quiz Book_20210205121199924.pdf
20th Century Theater, Methods, History.pptx
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
Computer Architecture Input Output Memory.pptx
AI-driven educational solutions for real-life interventions in the Philippine...
Weekly quiz Compilation Jan -July 25.pdf
Environmental Education MCQ BD2EE - Share Source.pdf
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
Paper A Mock Exam 9_ Attempt review.pdf.
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes

Tutorial 5

  • 2. Curtis, R., Friedman, A., Neaigus, B., Jose, B., Goldstein, M. and Ildefonso, G. (1995) ‘Street-level drug markets: network structure and HIV risk’, Social Networks 17: 229–49. Observations and survey. Interviews with a selected sample of the participant who agreed to talk. Define and situate three categories of injecting drug users (IDUs) - a core, an inner periphery and an outer periphery - in a street-level drug market scene in Bushwick, a NY area (originally settled by the Dutch…). Data from ethnographic fieldwork were used to define a 'core' network of IDUs, and a formal survey was used to collect data about social ties among local IDUs. 'Inner‘ and 'outer' peripheral groups are defined in terms of the presence or absence of direct links to the core. Different locations in these network structures were associated with different levels of AIDS risk behaviours and of HIV infection rates. QL  QN
  • 3. Method Ethnographic fieldwork, hundreds of drug users (including many non-injectors) were contacted and observed by the ethnographic staff. The fieldwork generated several hundred pages of observational notes as well as 210 open-ended interviews with 68 drug users in the neighborhood. Structured independent interviews with 767 IDUs were completed in the project's storefront, and HIV-antibody tests were done on 90% of them. Questions in the structured interviews which asked respondents to name and describe their injection partners during the 30 days prior to the interview. A link between two people is established: • When a network member arrived at the research storefront accompanied by the index subject, the pair was considered to be linked • Through a field link in which the subject pointed out a nominated contact to a research staff member; • Through ethnographic observation (i.e. two subjects being seen together in a social or drug-related interaction by the project's ethnographic staff); • Through matching a number of key descriptive variables of nominated injecting network members in the study's field data base (e.g. age within 5 years, first name or nickname, height within 3 inches, ethnic group, etc.)
  • 4. Large and heterogeneous 'core network' of street-level drug users in the neighborhood. The core network was defined by using two types of ethnographically generated data: observations and self-reports from drug users and distributors. The most important criterion for inclusion in the core network was validation by other core network members. Criteria of inclusion: • sharing drugs • drug distributors also contributed to the definition of core network members, by giving out free sample of a new brand to core members who were likely to share with others • Periphery members seek the assistance of core network members to help them buy drugs (especially heroin) as well as to gain access to local places where they could use drugs. 40 members of the core network from an eligible sample of 767 IDUs.
  • 6. Any IDU in the formal survey who was not a member of our identified 'core network' was considered a member of the periphery. The periphery included, among others (a) people who lived in the neighborhood but were only occasional users of street-level drugs (b) local residents who used street-level drugs every day but kept strictly to themselves and used them in the privacy of their homes (c) daily users who came from other neighborhoods to buy for themselves and their friends but who did not spend much time in Bushwick. Members of the inner periphery were primarily defined as • Those non-core IDUs who said that they had shared drugs locally with at least one member of the core network within 30 days prior to being interviewed. • Those named by core network members as injection partners. 95 members of the inner periphery were identified with the structured interviews
  • 7. The drug-use levels of many core group members were sustained through a combination of their own income-generating activities (e.g. selling works, stealing, welfare, panhandling, etc.) and through sharing drugs with members of the inner periphery who were dependent upon core network members for market information, purchasing assistance and/or providing a local site to use drugs before leaving the neighborhood.
  • 8. Members of the 'outer' periphery were defined in this research as drug injectors who did not inject with core network members. Members of the outer periphery tended to make their own purchases and use drugs in the privacy of their homes. Since they tended not to 'hang out' in the vicinity of local drug markets or drug-using locations, relatively few ethnographic field observations were made of the outer periphery. Although many were recruited for the structured interviews, which were conducted in the privacy of the research project's storefront, few members of the outer periphery wanted to talk on the street.