Piecing together the picture
There are many different ways of understanding a new drug. A chemist can run tests and identify what the novel substance is made of, the properties it has and its likely effects. A social scientist can track and document the way it’s being used, which can have significant implications for its effects.
In a first for the UK, Greater Manchester Combined Authority has now commissioned Manchester Met to monitor new substance use trends and drug market changes.
The Greater Manchester Trends Research on Emergent and New Drugs Survey (GM Trends) combines Rob and his criminology colleagues expertise with the forensic chemistry provided by Dr Oliver Sutcliffe’s research team, MANDRAKE.
Put them both together, and there is a powerful new perspective to be had. As Professor Ralphs puts it: “Our approach uniquely combines the testing of substances – the chemistry of it – with the social science. It’s interdisciplinary and revelatory.”
Rob and his colleagues in SUAB were able to get a clearer understanding of how the new psychoactive substances were being used by a wide range of groups - people in prison or being released on licence, homeless people, clubbers, and those using the drugs during sex.
Crucially the insights their interdisciplinary research provides are used to train health and social care practitioners, and to help a wide range of services plan better responses to emerging trends, including substance use treatment providers and the police.
Through a combination of data analysis, focus groups, observations and interviews, they recommended improvements to partner agencies, including the introduction of a drug alert and drug information system. Other measures included modelling good practice and suggestions for how to improve treatment for people suffering from the effects of Spice.
The work also helped assess whether existing services were able to meet users’ needs, and identify gaps in the knowledge or training for staff. They provide awareness raising and professional development training for frontline staff including health care, criminal justice and housing sectors on new drug trends and how to reduce harm.
This need for staff upskilling in drugs services was also highlighted Black Report, commissioned by the Home Office and the Department of Health and Social Care. The report made recommendations to improve drug use treatment and prevention, and SUAB’s research complements this by keeping drugs services informed about emerging trends.
Protecting the vulnerable
A focus of the GM Trends 2022 survey was on young people’s use of nitrous oxide, which is intended for use in food production. Also known as laughing gas and NOS, it can be inhaled to give a feeling of being relaxed and giggly. But it may make users anxious and cause powerful headaches, and in some circumstances lead to suffocation.
Recent data pointed to an increased use of larger catering-sized cannisters of nitrous oxide, with users going to hospital with third degree burns or neurological damage as a result.
Following a similar approach to Spice, researchers interviewed young people to understand how the nitrous oxide is being used, the risks it can present and how services may need to respond.