Experiences and perceptions of people who use heroin: public health lessons from Hermosillo, Mexico

Experiencias y percepciones de personas que usan heroína: lecciones de salud pública desde Hermosillo, México

As experiências e percepções de usuários de heroína: lições de saúde pública de Hermosillo, México

Silvia Magali Cuadra-Hernández Sergio Salazar-Arriola Armando Arredondo-López María Beatriz Duarte-Gómez Verónica Cuadra-Hernández Celina Rueda-Neria About the authors

Abstract:

Heroin consumption in Mexico is low compared with its use in the United States; however, this practice is more common in the northern region of Mexico than in the rest of the country, being documented only in cities that are located exactly at the Mexico-U.S. border. The Mexican legal framework is focused on rehabilitation, but its effects on the lives of users are unknown. The objective of this research was to analyze how the regulatory Mexican framework is conceptualized and practiced in the daily life of a group of heroin users from a northern city, where consumption has recently spread and has not been documented. We collected the official registered data from users and conducted a qualitative study in Hermosillo, Sonora. A research on the legal framework was conducted, as well as on the city’s context. Data on heroin users can be found at HIV health center, as there is no other source of such records. The Mexican legal framework aims at rehabilitation and at avoiding criminalization; however, the daily life of users drives them towards crime circuits: people commit crimes to stay in prison, where they can control the addiction and get heroin, in case of abstinence. The Mexican State has no empirical information to improve its programs and laws related to the use of heroin. The daily practices of users become not only epidemiological but social risks to the community and to the users themselves. Also, the lack of access due to stigmatization, criminalization and violence, increases the inequities, creating a cycle that reproduces poverty and suffering as part of a social structure. Therefore, changes are needed in the justice system.

Keywords:
Heroin Dependence; Social Stigma; Violence; Qualitative Analysis

Resumen:

El consumo de heroína en México es bajo si se compara con su consumo en EE.UU.; no obstante, esta práctica es más común en la zona norte de México que en el resto del país, estando documentada solamente en ciudades que están localizadas exactamente en la frontera entre México y EE.UU. El marco legal mexicano está centrado en la rehabilitación, sin embargo sus efectos en las vidas de los consumidores son desconocidos. El objetivo de esta investigación fue analizar cómo se conceptualiza el marco regulatorio mexicano, y cómo se hace realidad en la vida diaria de un grupo de personas usuarias de heroína, procedentes de una ciudad del norte, donde recientemente el consumo se ha extendido y no se ha documentado. Nosotros recogimos datos oficiales registrados de consumidores y realizamos un estudio cualitativo en Hermosillo, Sonora. Se realizó una investigación sobre el marco legal, así como del contexto de la ciudad. Los datos sobre los consumidores de heroína sólo se pueden encontrar en centros de salud especializados en VIH, pues que no existe otra fuente para tales registros. El marco legal mexicano pretende la rehabilitación y evitar la criminalización; sin embargo, la vida diaria de los consumidores les conduce hacia los circuitos del crimen: la gente comete delitos para estar en prisión, donde pueden controlar la adicción y conseguir heroína, en caso de abstinencia. El estado mexicano no cuenta con información empírica para mejorar los programas y leyes relacionadas con el consumo de heroína. Las prácticas diarias de los consumidores se han convertido no sólo en riesgos epidemiológicas, sino tambiém en riesgos sociales para la comunidad y los propios consumidores. Asimismo, la falta de acceso debido a la estigmatización, la criminalización y la violencia, incrementa las inequidades, creando un círculo vicioso que reproduce la pobreza y el sufrimiento, como parte de la estructura social. Por ello, es necesario que se produzcan cambios en el sistema judicial.

Palabras-clave:
Dependencia de Heroína; Estigma Social; Violencia; Análisis Cualitativo

Resumo:

O consumo da heroína é baixo no México, comparado ao uso nos Estados Unidos, porém essa prática é mais comum na região Norte do México em comparação com o resto do país, sendo documentada apenas nas cidades localizadas justamente na fronteira com os Estados Unidos. A legislação mexicana visa principalmente a reabilitação, mas seus efeitos sobre a vida dos usuários não são conhecidos. Este estudo teve como objetivo analisar a maneira pela qual o arcabouço regulatório mexicano é conceituado e praticado na vida diária de um grupo de usuários de heroína de um município no Norte do México, onde o consumo tem sido disseminado recentemente, mas sem ter sido documentado até então. Foram coletados os dados oficiais sobre usuários, seguido por um estudo qualitativo em Hermosillo, no Estado de Sonora. Foram estudados a legislação pertinente e o contexto local em Hermosillo. Os dados sobre os usuários de heroína foram encontrados nos centros de atendimento a pessoas com HIV, uma vez que não existe outra fonte desses registros. A legislação mexicana visa a reabilitação dos usuários, evitando sua criminalização, mas sua vida cotidiana os empurra para os circuitos do crime. Assim, os indivíduos cometem crimes para permanecer na prisão, onde conseguem controlar a dependência e obter a droga em casos de síndrome de abstinência. O governo mexicano não dispõe de dados empíricos para melhorar os programas e leis relacionados ao uso da heroína. As práticas diárias dos usuários se transformam em riscos, não apenas epidemiológicos como também sociais, tanto para a comunidade quanto para os próprios usuários. Além disso, a falta de acesso a serviços, em função da combinação de estigmatização, criminalização e violência, aumenta as desigualdades, criando um ciclo que reproduz e o sofrimento enquanto parte de uma estrutura social. Portanto, são necessárias mudanças urgentes no sistema de justiça.

Palavras-chave:
Dependência de Heroína; Estigma Social; Violência; Análise Qualitativa

Introduction

Users of injected heroin in Mexico were 0.1% of the population between ages 12 and 65 in 2016 11. Instituto Nacional de Psiquiatría Ramón de la Fuente Muñiz; Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública; Secretaría de Salud. Encuesta nacional de adicciones 2011: reporte de drogas. http://www.conadic.salud.gob.mx/pdfs/ENA_2011_DROGAS_ILICITAS_.pdf (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
http://www.conadic.salud.gob.mx/pdfs/ENA...
,22. Comisión Nacional contra las Adicciones. Encuesta nacional de adicciones 2008. Reporte de drogas. http://www.conadic.salud.gob.mx/pdfs/ena08/ENA08_NACIONAL.pdf (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
http://www.conadic.salud.gob.mx/pdfs/ena...
. This is a low prevalence compared with that of the U.S., which was at 0.3% in 2014 33. Center for Behavioral Health Statistics and Quality. Behavioral health trends in the United States: results from the 2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/NSDUH-FRR1-2014/NSDUH-FRR1-2014.htm (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/defaul...
,44. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services (N-SSATS). Data on substance abuse treatment facilities. https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/default/files/2013_N-SSATS/2013_N-SSATS_National_Survey_of_Substance_Abuse_Treatment_Services.pdf (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
https://www.samhsa.gov/data/sites/defaul...
. However, the use of heroin must also be analyzed by its consequences within these minority groups and their interaction with the community. The use of injectable illegal drugs, including heroin, is associated with HIV transmission. Between 1983 and 2015, 1,806 injecting drug users were officially registered in Mexico. In this period, an HIV prevalence of 1.42% was recorded for such users, while a prevalence of 2.8% was found in two other Mexican cities at the U.S. border: Tijuana, Baja California, and Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua 55. Centro Nacional para la Prevención y Control del VIH/Sida. Epidemiological surveillance of HIV/AIDS cases in Mexico National Registry of Cases of AIDS. http://www.censida.salud.gob.mx/descargas/epidemiologia/RN_2do_trim_2015.pdf (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
http://www.censida.salud.gob.mx/descarga...
.

Mexico has had strategies and a legal framework to stop the use of illegal substances for more than 12 years. However, the increase in drug injection, especially in the northern states of the country 11. Instituto Nacional de Psiquiatría Ramón de la Fuente Muñiz; Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública; Secretaría de Salud. Encuesta nacional de adicciones 2011: reporte de drogas. http://www.conadic.salud.gob.mx/pdfs/ENA_2011_DROGAS_ILICITAS_.pdf (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
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, shows that this judicial framework, with all its characteristics, is not running properly, affecting the lives of drug users. Thus, the purpose of this research was to analyze how these regulatory frameworks are experienced, perceived and practiced. This is based on the premise that perceptions and experiences are a phenomenon 66. Husserl E. Ideas relativas a una fenomenología pura y una filosofía fenomenológica. 3ª Ed. México DF: Fondo de Cultura Económica; 1986.,77. Husserl E. La idea de la fenomenología. Mexico DF: Editorial Herder; 2012. lived in a particular manner, as the actors make different readings of reality and confer meaning to it. In the case of heroin consumption, the phenomenon explored is how a legal context where use is criminalized leads to greater consumption.

The study group of users that inject heroin is located in the city of Hermosillo, Sonora, where heroin use has not been explored as in other studies carried out in Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez. Hermosillo is located in north-western Mexico, but, although it is not at the border, it has a long migratory tradition, with a recent spread of heroin use - less than 10 years - and with a 0.79% Human Development Index, which is considered a medium level 88. Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo. Índice de Desarrollo Humano para las Entidades Federativas, México 2015. http://consulta.mx/index.php/estudios-e-investigaciones/el-mundo/item/635-indice-de-desarrollo-humano-para-las-entidades-federativas-mexico-2015 (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
http://consulta.mx/index.php/estudios-e-...
. In addition, the Mexican government has not detected this type of consumption in the state of Sonora or in its capital 99. Herrera JL. Informe ante la Comisión Interamericana para el control del abuso de drogas. http://cicad.oas.org/apps/Document.aspx?Id=989 (accessed on 9/Sep/2017).
http://cicad.oas.org/apps/Document.aspx?...
, but empirical observation indicates the contrary. Thus, scientific documentation could be useful for the enrichment of laws, programs and services oriented towards these groups.

Material and methods

This qualitative research, based on specific techniques such as field observations and semi-structured interviews 1010. Taylor SJ, Bogdan R. Introducción a los métodos cualitativos en investigación. La búsqueda de los significados. Barcelona: Editorial Paidós; 1992.,1111. Morse JM. Asuntos críticos en los métodos de investigación cualitativa. Medellín: Editorial Universidad de Antioquia; 2003.,1212. Castro R, Bronfman M. Problemas no resueltos en la integración de métodos cualitativos y cuantitativos en la investigación social en salud. In: Bronfman M, Castro R, editors. Salud, cambio social y política. Perspectivas desde América Latina. Mexico DF: Edamex; 1999. p. 49-94.,1313. Sierra F. Función y sentido de la entrevista cualitativa en investigación social. In: Galindo-Cáceres J, editor. Técnicas de investigación en sociedad, cultura y comunicación. México: Pearson Educación Addison Wesley: 1998. p. 277-346., sought to find out about direct experiences of users that inject heroin: including their perceptions of the introjection, practice and reproduction of the Mexican legal framework in their daily life. This type of phenomenological study, which bases the construction of knowledge on experience and infers what was not experienced 66. Husserl E. Ideas relativas a una fenomenología pura y una filosofía fenomenológica. 3ª Ed. México DF: Fondo de Cultura Económica; 1986.,77. Husserl E. La idea de la fenomenología. Mexico DF: Editorial Herder; 2012.,1414. Husserl E. Invitación a la fenomenología. Barcelona: Ediciones Paidós; 1992.,1515. Brentano F. Psicología desde el punto de vista empírico. Buenos Aires: Editorial Schapire-Parana 608; 1935., provides empirical data with a strong internal validity 1616. Walsh D, Downe S. Appraising the quality of qualitative research. Midwifery 2006; 22:108-19.,1717. Tong A, Sainsbury P, Craig J. Consolidates criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ): a 32 item checklist for interviews and focus group. Int J Qual Health Care 2007; 19:349-57., allows an approach of people who are hiding and in persecution contexts, and helps us understand various dimensions of a precarious social world. This is the case of the interviewees who live in semi-clandestine circumstances, in poverty, besides being stigmatized and exposed to abuse by authorities and drug cartels.

To insert the qualitative exploration in the local context, the official records of the heroin users were searched in order to learn the magnitude of the population, and then a documentary research was carried out. Subsequently, to contact the informants 1818. Chenail RJ. Interviewing the investigator: strategies for addressing instrumentation and researcher bias concerns in qualitative research. Qualitative Report 2011; 16:255-62.,1919. Tuckett AG. Qualitative research sampling: the very real complexities. Nurse Res 2004; 12:47-61., field observations were conducted in places referred by non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and personnel at the HIV health care services. The group of informants consisted of ten people who were located and interviewed on the streets, in parking lots, in “shooting galleries” (called yongos) and rehabilitation center, using the snowball sampling technique 2020. Neuman WL. Social research methods: quantitative and qualitative approaches. New York: Pearson International; 2014.,2121. Noy Ch. Sampling knowledge: the hermeneutics of snowball sampling in qualitative research. Int J Soc Res Methodol 2008; 11:327-44.; this was done in June and August 2015. The physician who was in charge of HIV services in the state conducted the interviews. This is part of a small and limited program of public health services that includes the participation of NGOs, which offered to help reduce the risk of HIV infection by providing clean syringes, disinfection materials and condoms. Users that inject heroin know and trust the people in this program, which allowed us to approach them. Still, it was something difficult to do, because of the criminal character of heroin sales; the situation created mistrust in at least two of the interviewees and there was at least one violent reaction against the interviewer.

To find the connection between these experiences and the field of public health policies, we also analyzed the legal framework related to illegal substances. To do so, we looked for the laws that regulate the use of illegal drugs in Mexico and found the General Health Law (Ley General de Salud), the Federal Penal Code (Código Penal Federal) and the Federal Code of Penal Procedures (Código Federal de Procedimientos Penales), which point out punishments for specific cases. We focused on the measures the Mexican State indicate for rehabilitation and incarceration. Some data were also obtained from the local press to reconstruct the context in which the consumption takes place.

The testimonies were recorded, transcribed and analyzed using the Atlas.ti (https://atlasti.com/) program for qualitative data, which allows for an analysis of the text based on the selection of paragraphs, their classification into codes and grouping into families of codes to generate thematic areas. The analysis focused on the repercussions on the daily life of heroin users, on the measures proposed in the legal framework of the Mexican State, based on the premise that reality is constructed socially 2222. Berger T. Luckmann T. The social construction of reality. A treatise in the Sociology of knowledge. Middlesex: Penguin books; 1991.,2323. Schütz A. La construcción significativa del mundo social. Introducción a la sociología comprensiva. Barcelona: Ediciones Paidós; 1993. and on values that guide practices understood as cultural capital 2424. Bourdieu P. Distinction. A social critique of the judgement of taste. Cambridge: Harvard University Press; 1987.. These starting points allowed us to treat the interviewees’ discourse as concrete data, thus avoiding the relativism into which pure phenomenology could fall, and stating that practices, being cultural capitals, can be considered a value and be reproduced, as it happens with economic capitals.

We knew theoretically that people in addictive conditions develop their own strategies to get substances. To manage their consumption, they have their versions of harm reduction approach or rehabilitation 2525. Boucher LM, Marshall Z, Martin A, Larose-Hébert K, Flynn JV, Lalonce C, et al. Expanding conceptualizations of harm reduction: results from a qualitative community-based participatory research study with people who inject drugs. Harm Reduct J 2017; 14:18., developing coping mechanisms for dealing with crime 2626. Akhtar SH, South N. "Hidden from heroin's history": heroin use and dealing within an English Asian community. A case study. Crime Prevention Studies 2000; 11:153-77., stigmatization 2727. Bottorff JL, Bisell L, Balneaves L, Oliffe JL, Capler NR, Buxton J. Perceptions of cannabis as a stigmatized medicine: a qualitative descriptive study. Harm Reduct J 2013; 10:2.,2828. Cuadra-Hernández SM, Zarco-Mera Á, Infante-Xibillé C, Caballero-García M. The organization of key populations connected to HIV transmission: an intervention to abate stigma; Mexico, 2005-2009. Salud Colectiva 2012; 8:191-204., mistreatment, HIV infection and deficient healthcare services; but in this case, we were interested in exploring their specific notions and practices, comparing them with the proposals of the Mexican legal framework and its implementation.

In all interviews, informed consent was requested and recorded digitally, as well as the testimonies. The names of all people and their exact location were hidden. An analysis of units of meaning based on the life experiences of the interviewees was carried out following inductive logic, which consists of proposing general conclusions based on particular data 2929. Bertaux D. Los relatos de vida en el análisis social. In: Aceves J, editor. Historia oral. Parte II: Los conceptos, los métodos. México DF: Instituto Mora-UAM; 1989. pp. 136-48., from grouping codes until forming four descriptive categories that indicated how the state policy is experienced: childhood and context of drug use, life on the streets, police interaction and the meanings and practices involved in the rehabilitation process (Box 1).

Box 1
Analysis of interviews: coding, families of codes and categories.

Results

The official records of users that inject heroin from Hermosillo, were only found at the HIV health services for injecting drug users. Until the 4th trimester of 2015, 747 users that inject heroin were registered at state health services from Hermosillo, all of them were living with HIV and most of them had already developed AIDS (Table 1). This was the only official state registration in the city. This information is part of the 4,011 existing cases officially registered by the National Center for the Prevention and Control of HIV/AIDS of México for the state of Sonora 3030. Centro Nacional para la Prevención y Control del VIH/Sida. Vigilancia Epidemiológica de casos de VIH/SIDA en México. Registro Nacional de Casos de SIDA. http://censida.salud.gob.mx/descargas/epidemiologia/RN_DIA_MUNDIAL_2016a.pdf (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
http://censida.salud.gob.mx/descargas/ep...
.

Table 1
Injecting drug users living with HIV/AIDS registered in health services in Sonora, Mexico, 1986-2015.

The participants in the qualitative study were eight men and one woman, who were not registered in the official records of the HIV health services (Table 2). All participants reported experiences of migration to the U.S. Time of heroin use ranged from 4 to 30 years. All of them were living in family groups. The interviewees had shared syringes and heroin at least once in their lives.

The main arguments for sharing syringes and heroin were eagerness to consume the drug and solidarity with peers. Five of them said they had not used a condom during their last sexual encounter, and seven reported having had multiple partners. Seven people had been at least once in a rehabilitation center - institutions managed by psychiatrists and at other times by personnel who only had empirical knowledge -, whose objective is to help people with addictions to detoxify and overcome their obsession with substance consumption; some of these centers are public and some are private. Three of the participants had been in jail. All the participants in the study said they had had contact with legal or illegal addictive substances at a very early age in their domestic group or community. The context of drug use, proposed as a category (Box 1), is clearly described in these testimonies:

In my family, my mom is the only woman who did [illegal drugs], and we can say that my addiction began because of her. She (...) since I can remember she has always done it” (Female 9).

I met a group of friends from the neighborhood (...). It was filled with cholos [Mexican Americans] (...). They were already doing drugs, smoking, they pisteaban [drank alcoholic beverages], smoked marijuana. I was about 13 or 14 years old” (Male 5).

Table 2
Characteristics of informants. Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, June and August 2015.

In Mexico, the legal framework to prevent illegal substance abuse includes several laws. The General Health Law 3131. Ley General de Salud. Decreto por el que se reforman, adicionan y derogan diversas disposiciones de la Ley General de Salud, del Código Penal Federal y del Código Federal de Procedimientos Penales. Diario Oficial de la Federación 2016; 11 abr. http://dof.gob.mx/nota_detalle_popup.php?codigo=5106093 (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
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, in Chapter V, classifies narcotics and psychotropic substances. Heroin belongs to the first group. This law also prohibits cultivation, possession, sale and distribution of illegal drugs, although it allows the use of minimum doses (Box 2). This Chapter is linked to the Federal Penal Code 3232. Código Penal Federal. Legislación Federal. Vigente al 7 de abril de 2016. https://www.juridicas.unam.mx/legislacion/ordenamiento/codigo-penal-federal (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
https://www.juridicas.unam.mx/legislacio...
and to the Federal Code of Penal Procedures 3333. Código Federal de Procedimientos Penales. Última reforma publicada: 12 de enero de 2016. http://www.ordenjuridico.gob.mx/Documentos/Federal/wo83102.doc (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
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, where punishments are established for infringing the General Health Law. From the perspective of the Mexican legal system, consumption of illegal substances will not be punished for moderate use, since the system emphasizes rehabilitation. The only actions considered crimes are cultivation, trafficking (which is proven when more doses than the amount allowed are carried), and/or sales. Currently, punishments for carrying larger amounts than those allowed imply sentences from 10 months to 6 years in prison.

Box 2
Table of maximum doses of illegal substances permitted under the Mexican law, 2016.

Although Hermosillo is not the point where opium gum passes directly into the U.S., according to the local press, the city is part of the circuit of heroin return, being transported on land, with a stop-over in San Luis Río Colorado, Sonora 3434. Esquivel J. Presente digital newspaper. Sonora-Arizona, puerta abierta para el cartel de Sinaloa. Revista Proceso 2014. http://www.proceso.com.mx/375978/sonora-arizona-puerta-abierta-para-el-cartel-de-sinaloa (accessed on 09/Sep/2017).
http://www.proceso.com.mx/375978/sonora-...
. To cover that long route, it is necessary to involve federal, state and local authorities. In this context of economic interests based on corruption, violence and financial precariousness, users that inject heroin are concerned about their health by trying to control and/or reduce consumption.

The categories “life experiences and practices for surviving in the public space” and “meanings and practices of their own rehabilitation and harm reduction” proposed in the encoding plan (Box 1) interact with each other. Thus, participants reported taking methadone to reduce heroin consumption instead of taking buprenorphine or attending a detoxification program with behavioral therapies. In Mexico, methadone is distributed by private clinics, with high out-of-pocket costs for users that inject heroin; also, the users stated that methadone substitution is not effective to feel clean, which is a very important notion for users thar inject heroin:

“[I] used methadone, but I didn’t feel clean with methadone. Yes, I felt better, that’s true, but the day I stopped using methadone was the worst! For 35 days I was like almost dead, I couldn’t even stand up. I was worse than with the heroin withdrawal symptoms and that was what made me come back to heroin (...).” (Male 7).

According to users that inject heroin, cleansing of the body and vein fattening are the most effective ways to reduce consumption and survive in a context where there are no effective harm reduction programs. The first stage of these practices consists of mixing heroin with other legal or illegal drugs to reduce heroin consumption, avoiding withdrawal:

Right now I shoot up heroin and the medicine [Clonazepam] that controls me, so I don’t continue shooting more heroin, and it works. Sometimes I smoke a joint (...). I don’t drink alcohol” (Male 7).

Consumption must be safe, controlled and held in an environment protected from the desert climate, as the temperatures in Hermosillo, reach more than 122 degrees Fahrenheit during the summer. The heat is deadly if one is out on the street. To hide from the heat some users get themselves admitted to rehabilitation institutions, whose goal is to encourage their own perception of safe and clean consumption or at least avoid overdoses. Getting locked up in a rehabilitation center may be a personal option or a State order. This happens when the user has been arrested and a judge decides he/she is a drug addict and orders his/her confinement in an institution. As a result, users that inject heroin need a safe place for controlled consumption, and the State sends them to rehabilitation center or to jail, where there is trafficking of illegal substances, so safe use is guaranteed when committing a crime. Cleaning the vein can also be done in jail. There is food there, drinks, and in case of withdrawal symptoms, there are palliative drugs, such as crack, clonazepam and heroin:

When I felt flat out terrible, I knew that I needed a break, that I needed to go inside to fatten up the vein, so yes, I would go [to jail]” (Male 1).

The legal system indicates rehabilitation for the sake of the public health, but in people’s real experience, almost the same conditions that exist in jail occurs at rehabilitation centers: human rights violations, corruption, torture and extortion:

I’ve been in rehabilitation centres about 5 times. The first time I made the decision to go in, but I got pulled out ahead of time because I was getting beaten by the other guys” (Male 2).

They [the police] come and pick you up. If you have money, it’s good, you get away. If not, they fuck you over. Last time they caught me with half a gram (...). They really fucked me over and said:put it here!’, ‘with whom do you work?’, ‘I don’t work with anyone, can’t you see that I’m getting it to get myself high?’ Even policemen have told meOK, te damos línea (we’ll give you instructions that you have to obey) and we can sell it to you’” (Male 4).

In this context, users go to prison almost periodically to keep themselves alive and able to consume. Going through this situation is normal. Prison as a space for reintegration is a myth: drug users do not believe in this, nor do the jailers. Jail is not designed for that:

The first time I was at the Cereso [jail], yes, I did consume. There is another type of heroin, I think it has a better quality (...). At the beginning, at the Cereso, it was difficult to inject yourself (...), but then it became something normal” (Male 6).

Discussion

In Hermosillo, the only official sources of information on users that inject heroin were records of HIV care centres; however, they lack sociodemographic or consumer data, which does not allow us to know in depth the patterns of this group.

Analysing the Mexican legal framework, we could say that the approach to individual drug use is a public health problem, since it is regulated by the General Health Law: a limit is established between individual consumption and delinquency, and treatment is proposed to help users move away completely from addiction. However, consumption is not distinguished from trafficking; both are pursued and punished. This criminalization is supported by stigmatization. To pursue and punish is convenient for many other groups that profit from a captive market such as that of people who have already developed an addiction.

In this context, users that inject heroin develop their own notion of safe consumption in jail, which is the same as what they get at rehabilitation centers. The State’s perspective does not consider ways to reduce or change heroin to another substance that is less harmful, providing real and effective harm reduction for the strong addiction to heroin. The Mexican legal framework only proposes the absolute abstinence achieved through a rehabilitation program that includes punishment, torture and/or extortion by the police. Prison and internment in rehabilitation centers have the same characteristics: mistreatment, violence and corruption.

The web of meanings supporting heroin consumption has at its center the notion that the substance helps people live, and, following certain strategies in a disciplined way, it becomes a pillar for health. Pauses in consumption have been documented in other investigations and places 3535. Wenger LD, Lopez AM, Comfort M, Kral AH. The phenomenon of low-frequency heroin injection among street-based urban poor: drug user strategies and contexts of use. Int J Drug Policy 2014; 25:471-9.,3636. Ovalle LP. "Engordar la vena": discursos y prácticas sociales de los usuarios de drogas inyectables en Mexicali. Mexicali: Universidad Pedagógica Nacional; 2009. with strategies that are different from those used by the participants in this research. Heroin rationing strategies, built around the idea of cleaning or fattening the vein, are dangerous, not only because of the havoc caused by the substance 3737. Degenhardt L, Bucello CH, Mathers B, Briegleb C, Ali H, Hickman M, et al. Mortality among regular or dependent users of heroin and other opioids: a systematic review and meta-analysis of cohort studies. Addiction 2010; 106:32-51., but also because to be effective they must be carried out in criminal circuits, putting aside other public health problems such as HIV transmission. As described in other studies 3838. Ciccarone D, Harris M. Fire in the vein: heroin acidity and its proximal effect on users' health. Int J Drug Policy 2015; 26:1103-10., these are empirical ways of injecting heroin and taking care of the body, but structurally they drive people towards crime circuits. The relationship between users and the State only exist in criminal institutions; thus, the approach to crime circuits becomes a routine event that is normal and generates profits.

Conclusions

The case of Hermosillo shows that legal framework does not respond to the real rehabilitation for the users of inject heroin, and the State does not have social scientific informations to improve programs and laws. This qualitative research can be useful to evaluate the existing policies and redesign legal programs and frameworks if the social situation permits 3939. Bogdan R, Taylor S. Looking at the bright side: a positive approach to qualitative policy and evaluation research. Qual Sociol 13:183-92..

The Mexican legal framework proposes full rehabilitation without infrastructure or effective harm reduction strategies for heroin users, who need to control and reduce consumption in safe conditions. The lack of effective strategies for harm reduction is dangerous, reproducing harmful practices that increase the risk of overdose and crimes, creating scenarios of violence for users and for the rest of the community. Besides, the users interviewed were living in poverty, their criminalization and stigmatization makes heroin consumption a spiral that limits access to all services until they become unreachable, and it is only worse in contexts of HIV 4040. Infante C, Zarco A, Cuadra SM, Morrison K, Caballero M, Bronfman M, et al. El estigma asociado al VIH/SIDA: el caso de los prestadores de servicios de salud en México. Salud Pública Mex 2006; 48:141-50.,4141. Parker R, Aggleton P. HIV and AIDS-related stigma and discrimination: a conceptual framework and implications for action. Soc Sci Med 2013; 57:13-24.. Lack of access to services is a strong inequity in health 4242. Arredondo A, Orozco EN. Temas selectos en sistemas de salud: costos, financiamiento, equidad y gobernanza. Conceptos, tendencias, evidencias. Mérida: Universidad Autónoma de Yucatán; 2009.,4343. Scambler G. Resistance in unjust times: archer, structured agency and the sociology of health inequalities. Sociology 2012; 47:142-56.,4444. Whitehead M. The concepts and principles of equity and health. Copenhagen: World Health Organization Office for Europe; 1985., which turns into a “structuring structure”, as established by Bourdieu 4545. Bourdieu P. Razones prácticas. Sobre la teoría de la acción. Barcelona: Editorial Anagrama; 1997., reproducing harmful practices that are more and more inequitable and creating scenarios of more vulnerability for users. The exploration of these minority groups also implies taking an ethical position, which we hope will help decrease stigmatization and discrimination for consumers; this is a matter of urgency, especially because of the present escalation of violence, murders and disappearances in Mexico.

Acknowledgments

To the collaboration of the organizations Diverciudad A.C., Inspira Cambio A.C. and the State of Sonora HIV/AIDS Program. To the people who gave their brave testimony even though it could cost lives.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    23 Nov 2018

History

  • Received
    20 Oct 2017
  • Reviewed
    08 May 2018
  • Accepted
    14 June 2018
Escola Nacional de Saúde Pública Sergio Arouca, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: cadernos@ensp.fiocruz.br