Effects of drug involvement on long-term users’ family members

Autores/as

  • Cleiton José Santana
  • Magda Lúcia Felix de Oliveira

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15253/2175-6783.2017000500015

Palabras clave:

Sentinel Surveillance, Street Drugs, Epidemiological Surveillance, Wounds and Injuries.

Resumen

Objective: to analyze the effects of drugs on the families of users included in sentinel events. Methods: an exploratory study with epidemiological investigation of 30 cases of hospitalized patients with a diagnosis of physical trauma associated with drug use (sentinel events). Results: there was a predominance of males, with an average of 40.1 years, low schooling and unemployed. Most had used drugs on average for 20.8 years and were in families with addictive behavior. The most commonly used drug was alcohol, and traumas were due to traffic accidents, falls and aggression (73.4%). Conclusion: drug abuse determined aggressiveness in the family context, previous trauma, illicit maneuvers for buying drugs, and home use of drugs, thus reinforcing social and family vulnerability.

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Publicado

2017-11-21

Cómo citar

Santana, C. J., & Oliveira, M. L. F. de. (2017). Effects of drug involvement on long-term users’ family members. Rev Rene, 18(5), 671–678. https://doi.org/10.15253/2175-6783.2017000500015

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