Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does that mean for UBC students?
- With high rates of substance use in Queer communities and BC’s ongoing toxic drug crisis, many Queer youth are left to navigate substance use and recovery on their own. + With high risk of substance (mis)use in Queer communities and BC’s ongoing toxic drug crisis, Queer youth are left to navigate substance use and recovery on their own.
@@ -99,7 +109,7 @@Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
“No. I’m a teenager.
Teenagers are allowed to do this.”
Teenagers are allowed to do this.”
- That’s what Sylvie, now a UBC graduate student, used to say to their friends as a 16-year-old when they would ask Sylvie to stop drinking. It started off innocently — a bunch of high schoolers having some drinks together, going through what seemed to be a rite of passage. But it soon became “problematic,” as Sylvie described it. + That’s what Sylvie, now a UBC graduate student, used to say to their friends as a 16-year-old when they would ask them to stop drinking. Their drinking started off innocently — a bunch of high schoolers having some drinks together, going through what seemed to be a rite of passage. But it soon became what Sylvie described as “problematic.”
“I had people pulling me aside and being like, ‘Hey, do you want to maybe not be drunk all the time?’” said Sylvie, whose name has been changed to protect their identity because of the stigma against substance use. @@ -107,7 +117,7 @@
Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
- When Sylvie started at UBC five years ago, they were “forced back into being a teenager,” since BC’s legal drinking age of 19 is higher than in other Canadian provinces.
+ When Sylvie was 18, they started their undergraduate degree at UBC. Sylvie said they were “forced back into being a teenager,” since BC’s legal drinking age of 19 is higher than in other Canadian provinces.
“That made me do a bunch of crazy shit in order to get drunk or get high because I couldn't do it the normal way,” they said. “And then through that, I realized that maybe my relationship with substances is not normal or could use some re-evaluating.”
@@ -138,7 +148,7 @@
Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
- Substance use can also impact Queer people's mental health. A 2021 survey by the Trevor Project — a US-based non-profit focused on suicide prevention efforts in Queer youth — found that misuse of alcohol, cannabis and prescription drugs are associated with greater odds of attempting suicide in 2SLGBTQIA+ youth aged 13–24. The primary results from the survey also found that:
+ Substance use can also impact Queer people's mental health. A 2021 survey by the Trevor Project — a US-based non-profit focused on suicide prevention efforts in Queer youth — found that misuse of alcohol, cannabis and prescription drugs are associated with greater odds of attempting suicide in 2SLGBTQIA+ youth aged 13–24. The primary results from the survey also found:
-
@@ -154,7 +164,7 @@
Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
- With high rates of substance use in Queer communities, a lack of harm reduction resources for recovering Queer individuals and BC’s ongoing toxic drug crisis — which was declared a public health emergency in 2016 — many Queer youth at UBC and around Vancouver are left to navigate substance use and recovery on their own.
+ With high rates of substance use in Queer communities and BC’s ongoing toxic drug crisis — which was declared a public health emergency in 2016 — many Queer youth at UBC and around Vancouver are left to navigate substance use and recovery on their own.
@@ -166,11 +176,11 @@ Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
Goodyear, whose research explores the implications of substance use among 2SLGBTQIA+ youth, said these structural inequities like sexism, homophobia and transphobia, intersect individual concerns like familial rejection, domestic violence and mental illness to create circumstances that can lead to substance misuse.
- When Sylvie started at UBC five years ago, they were “forced back into being a teenager,” since BC’s legal drinking age of 19 is higher than in other Canadian provinces. + When Sylvie was 18, they started their undergraduate degree at UBC. Sylvie said they were “forced back into being a teenager,” since BC’s legal drinking age of 19 is higher than in other Canadian provinces.
“That made me do a bunch of crazy shit in order to get drunk or get high because I couldn't do it the normal way,” they said. “And then through that, I realized that maybe my relationship with substances is not normal or could use some re-evaluating.” @@ -138,7 +148,7 @@
Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
- Substance use can also impact Queer people's mental health. A 2021 survey by the Trevor Project — a US-based non-profit focused on suicide prevention efforts in Queer youth — found that misuse of alcohol, cannabis and prescription drugs are associated with greater odds of attempting suicide in 2SLGBTQIA+ youth aged 13–24. The primary results from the survey also found that:
+ Substance use can also impact Queer people's mental health. A 2021 survey by the Trevor Project — a US-based non-profit focused on suicide prevention efforts in Queer youth — found that misuse of alcohol, cannabis and prescription drugs are associated with greater odds of attempting suicide in 2SLGBTQIA+ youth aged 13–24. The primary results from the survey also found:
-
@@ -154,7 +164,7 @@
Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
- Substance use can also impact Queer people's mental health. A 2021 survey by the Trevor Project — a US-based non-profit focused on suicide prevention efforts in Queer youth — found that misuse of alcohol, cannabis and prescription drugs are associated with greater odds of attempting suicide in 2SLGBTQIA+ youth aged 13–24. The primary results from the survey also found that: + Substance use can also impact Queer people's mental health. A 2021 survey by the Trevor Project — a US-based non-profit focused on suicide prevention efforts in Queer youth — found that misuse of alcohol, cannabis and prescription drugs are associated with greater odds of attempting suicide in 2SLGBTQIA+ youth aged 13–24. The primary results from the survey also found:
-
@@ -154,7 +164,7 @@
Substance use disproportionately impacts Queer communities. What does tha
- With high rates of substance use in Queer communities, a lack of harm reduction resources for recovering Queer individuals and BC’s ongoing toxic drug crisis — which was declared a public health emergency in 2016 — many Queer youth at UBC and around Vancouver are left to navigate substance use and recovery on their own. + With high rates of substance use in Queer communities and BC’s ongoing toxic drug crisis — which was declared a public health emergency in 2016 — many Queer youth at UBC and around Vancouver are left to navigate substance use and recovery on their own.