Could a drug-checking service increase intention to use ecstasy at a festival?

Author Identifier

Stephen Bright

https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9001-032X

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Drug and Alcohol Review

Volume

40

Issue

6

First Page

974

Last Page

978

PubMed ID

33677840

Publisher

Wiley

School

School of Arts and Humanities / School of Medical and Health Sciences

RAS ID

32851

Comments

Murphy, S., Bright, S. J., & Dear, G. (2021). Could a drug‐checking service increase intention to use ecstasy at a festival?. Drug and Alcohol Review, 40(6), 974-978. https://doi.org/10.1111/dar.13259

Abstract

Introduction:

Calls to provide sanctioned drug-checking (pill testing) at Australian music festivals have been met with resistance from most governments due to concerns that such services would increase use of ecstasy and other drugs. We investigated that concern and used the Theory of Planned Behaviour to examine the determinants of intention to use a drug-checking service.

Methods:

Data were collected over a 3-day period at a music festival in Western Australia. Participants (n = 247; 50% male; 52% aged 25–34 years) were presented with three hypothetical pill testing scenarios: no testing provided, onsite testing provided and fixed offsite testing provided.

Results:

Neither ecstasy users (n = 212) nor participants who had never used ecstasy (n = 35) reported an increased intention to use ecstasy in scenarios in which drug checking was provided. The combination of attitudes, subjective norms and perceived behavioural control predicted intention to use a fixed site drug-checking service, while only subjective norms predicted intention to use an onsite service.

Discussion and Conclusions:

These data do not support the view that offering a drug-checking service at a festival will result in ecstasy use by people who have never used ecstasy or lead to increased use among people who use ecstasy.

DOI

10.1111/dar.13259

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