La Trobe University’s Drugs, Gender & Sexuality (DruGS) research program tracks alcohol and other drug use issues, with a special focus on gender and sexuality.
Kylie was diagnosed with hepatitis C in the 1990s. Despite extremely high success rates for the new treatment, the first course didn’t cure it. She remembers that when the second course cured her of hepatitis C, she wanted to ‘shout from the rooftops’. https://t.co/2FwBmLpj8M
Shelley describes an occasion when she was in a car with two friends when one of them, Lisa, overdosed. Lisa had taken some other drugs that morning, and straight after injecting her heroin, she started to turn blue. https://t.co/RCn3XuTXE7
New article led by @dxmurphy from our @arc_gov_au-funded project: Remaking Chemsex Event Networks in the Age of PrEP. It argues for ‘a more expansive account of chemsex beyond the binaries of licit & illicit drugs, therapeutic & recreational use’: https://t.co/jOpCBBP13a
Read an overview of Gemma Nourse's (@gemma_nourse) latest article examining health professional understandings of performance and image-enhancing drugs, health and masculinity. https://t.co/qT6XzK395f
A second article drawn from my PhD research, co-authored with Professor David Moore and Professor @suzannemfraser, is now available via @CDPJournal. It examines the ways health professionals veridict the relationships between PIEDs, health and masculinity: https://t.co/cSivTY2vlB
Absolutely incredible and heartfelt Oration from Annie Madden, Executive Director of Harm Reduction Australia and former AIVL CEO, about the advocacy movement by and for people who use drugs in Australia throughout the years and honoring the amazing peers that led and on the shoulders of who we stand today. We love you deeply Annie, you are an inspiration as such a strong and amazing women who use drugs and advocate. We are lucky to have you and all the amazing peer leaders from our network making a difference for our fabulous community. 💜 We hope people in the room take on board your comments and asks about actively supporting us!
Lee was diagnosed with hepatitis C in 2002 or 2003 and had treatment in 2014. He was cured of hepatitis C through this treatment, having continued playing and coaching AFL football throughout the treatment period. https://t.co/Ep2n3u0Sb5
When visitor Noah overdosed at the home of Valentina and her former husband, she initially panicked and felt ‘hysterical’. She called emergency services and the operator she spoke to over the phone helped her feel calmer. https://t.co/fWCgrkqB56
Read about the uptake and impact of La Trobe University research including our recent stigma reduction toolkit for the Victorian healthcare workforce. https://t.co/FRWxQRitxa
Julia found out she had hepatitis C while pregnant with her first child. In 2017, she decided to seek treatment. For Julia, treatment was ‘simple’ and she was ‘really happy’ to receive the news that she had been cured of hepatitis C. https://t.co/maBSZyFxGq
Skye-Lee would like to do overdose response training so she could help should she come across someone experiencing an overdose. https://t.co/Yd5DIZrXIx
Simone describes an occasion when her friend Laura overdosed at her house. Simone injected her with naloxone, but this didn’t immediately revive her, so she called an ambulance and gave Laura CPR until she started to revive. https://t.co/EJIyu5ZdT6