Sequences of powder cocaine and crack use among arrestees in Los Angeles county

Citation
Vn. Shaw et al., Sequences of powder cocaine and crack use among arrestees in Los Angeles county, AM J DRUG A, 25(1), 1999, pp. 47-66
Citations number
14
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF DRUG AND ALCOHOL ABUSE
ISSN journal
00952990 → ACNP
Volume
25
Issue
1
Year of publication
1999
Pages
47 - 66
Database
ISI
SICI code
0095-2990(1999)25:1<47:SOPCAC>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
The epidemic of cocaine abuse has led to numerous studies on the substance. While extent of use, characteristics of users, patterns of use, and conseq uences of dependence are well documented for both powder cocaine and crack, few studies have dealt with the sequence or progression of use between the two forms of cocaine. This paper draws on arrestee data collected from cou nty jails in Los Angeles, California. It identifies four sequences of powde r cocaine and crack use and examines each sequence in terms of user charact eristics, history of use, dependence, contact with the criminal justice sys tem, and concomitant use of other drugs. Findings not only confirm some alr eady established observations, but also offer new knowledge on powder cocai ne and crack abuse. For instance, (a) whereas powder cocaine-initiated user s are more likely to progress to crack than to restrict their use to powder cocaine only, crack-initiated users tend more often to use crack only than to progress to powder cocaine; and (b) powder cocaine and crack, when used interchangeably, can interact and reinforce each other, resulting in a hig her level of use and dependence on both forms of the substance. This paper contributes to the understanding of powder cocaine and crack use among crim inal offenders, in particular, and across the adult population, in general. It also sheds light on prevention, treatment, and social control policies of both cocaine abuse and overall illicit drug use.