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Original Articles

Conflict and communication: managing the multiple affordances of take-home naloxone administration events in Australia

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Pages 29-37 | Received 15 Aug 2018, Accepted 21 Dec 2018, Published online: 27 Feb 2019

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (5)

Zahra Mamdani, Jackson P. Loyal, Jessica Xavier, Bernadette Pauly, Emma Ackermann, Skye Barbic, Jane A. Buxton & Alissa Greer. (2022) ‘We are the first responders’: overdose response experiences and perspectives among peers in British Columbia. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 0:0, pages 1-14.
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Joanne Neale, Adrian Farrugia, Aimee N. Campbell, Paul Dietze, Robyn Dwyer, Renae Fomiatti, Jermaine D. Jones, Sandra D. Comer, Suzanne Fraser & John Strang. (2022) Understanding preferences for type of take-home naloxone device: international qualitative analysis of the views of people who use opioids. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 29:2, pages 109-120.
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Adrian Farrugia, Carla Treloar & Suzanne Fraser. (2022) Overdoselifesavers.org: a mixed-method evaluation of a public information website on experiences of overdose and using take-home naloxone to save lives. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 29:1, pages 43-53.
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Eleanor Rochester & Melissa Graboyes. (2022) Experiences of people who use drugs with naloxone administration: a qualitative study. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 29:1, pages 54-61.
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Gillian Kolla & Carol Strike. (2021) Medicalization under prohibition: the tactics and limits of medicalization in the spaces where people use illicit drugs. Drugs: Education, Prevention and Policy 28:2, pages 127-137.
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Articles from other publishers (17)

Nyssa Ferguson, Adrian Farrugia, David Moore & Suzanne Fraser. (2024) Remaking the ‘angry Narcanned subject’: Affording new subject positions through take-home naloxone training. International Journal of Drug Policy 123, pages 104253.
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Michael Savic, Anthony Barnett, Kiran Pienaar, Adrian Carter, Narelle Warren, Emma Sandral, Victoria Manning & Dan I. Lubman. (2023) Staying with the silence: Silence as affording care in online alcohol and other drug counselling. International Journal of Drug Policy 116, pages 104030.
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Sarah Haines, Michael Savic, Suzanne Nielsen & Adrian Carter. (2023) Opioid‐related policy changes: Experiences and perspectives from people who use opioids to manage non‐cancer chronic pain. Drug and Alcohol Review.
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David Perlmutter, Courteney Wettemann, Callan Elswick Fockele, Tessa Frohe, Will Williams, Nathan Holland, Thea Oliphant-Wells, Hendrika Meischke & Jenna van Draanen. (2023) “Another tool in the toolkit”—Perceptions, suggestions, and concerns of emergency service providers about the implementation of a supervised consumption site. International Journal of Drug Policy 115, pages 104005.
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Josh Dumbrell, Hadi Daneshvar, Alberto Oteo, Alexander Baldacchino & Catriona Matheson. (2023) The acceptability of overdose alert and response technologies: introducing the TPOM-ODART framework. Harm Reduction Journal 20:1.
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Michelle Olding, Jade Boyd, Thomas Kerr, Al Fowler & Ryan McNeil. (2023) (Re)situating expertise in community-based overdose response: Insights from an ethnographic study of overdose prevention sites (OPS) in Vancouver, Canada. International Journal of Drug Policy 111, pages 103929.
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Bradley Kievit, Jessica C. Xavier, Max Ferguson, Heather Palis, Soroush Moallef, Amanda Slaunwhite, Terri Gillis, Rajmeet Virk & Jane A. Buxton. (2022) Intention to seek emergency medical services during community overdose events in British Columbia, Canada: a cross-sectional survey. Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy 17:1.
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Renae Fomiatti, Frances Shaw & Suzanne Fraser. (2022) ‘It's a different way to do medicine’: Exploring the affordances of telehealth for hepatitis C healthcare. International Journal of Drug Policy 110, pages 103875.
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Zahra Mamdani, Damian Feldman-Kiss, Sophie McKenzie, Mike Knott, Fred Cameron, Rayne Voyer, Jessica van Norren, Tracy Scott, Bernie Pauly & Jane A. Buxton. (2022) Core competencies of peer workers who use pulse oximeters to supplement their overdose response in British Columbia. PLOS ONE 17:9, pages e0273744.
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Emilie R. Macleod, Iren Tajbakhsh, Sarah Hamilton-Wright, Nancy Laliberte, Jessica L. Wiese & Flora I. Matheson. (2021) “They’re not doing enough.”: women’s experiences with opioids and naloxone in Toronto. Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy 16:1.
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Rosanna Smart & Sean Grant. (2021) Effectiveness and implementability of state-level naloxone access policies: Expert consensus from an online modified-Delphi process. International Journal of Drug Policy 98, pages 103383.
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Fiona Mercer, Joanna Astrid Miler, Bernie Pauly, Hannah Carver, Kristina Hnízdilová, Rebecca Foster & Tessa Parkes. (2021) Peer Support and Overdose Prevention Responses: A Systematic ‘State-of-the-Art’ Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18:22, pages 12073.
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Michael D. White, Dina Perrone, Aili Malm & Seth Watts. (2021) Narcan cops: Officer perceptions of opioid use and willingness to carry naloxone. Journal of Criminal Justice 72, pages 101778.
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J.M. Bowles, L.R. Smith, S.R. Verdugo, K.D. Wagner & P.J. Davidson. (2020) “Generally, you get 86′ed because you're a liability”: An application of Integrated Threat Theory to frequently witnessed overdoses and social distancing responses. Social Science & Medicine 260, pages 113190.
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Stephen Parkin, Joanne Neale, Caral Brown, Aimee N.C. Campbell, Felipe Castillo, Jermaine D. Jones, John Strang & Sandra D. Comer. (2020) Opioid overdose reversals using naloxone in New York City by people who use opioids: Implications for public health and overdose harm reduction approaches from a qualitative study. International Journal of Drug Policy 79, pages 102751.
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Gillian Kolla & Carol Strike. (2019) ‘It's too much, I'm getting really tired of it’: Overdose response and structural vulnerabilities among harm reduction workers in community settings. International Journal of Drug Policy 74, pages 127-135.
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Adrian Farrugia. (2019) Commentary on Elliott et al . (2019): How stigma shapes overdose revival and possible avenues to disrupt it . Addiction 114:8, pages 1387-1388.
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