Intended for healthcare professionals

Student Reviews

Junkies, druggies, addicts, scum?

BMJ 2004; 328 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/sbmj.0403131 (Published 01 March 2004) Cite this as: BMJ 2004;328:0403131
  1. Bruno Rushforth, final year medical student1
  1. 1University of Manchester

What do you call people who inject illicit drugs? How does your consultant refer to these patients? “Scum” was the preferred term of one doctor on our team. But dehumanising people in this way is a dangerous step, falling well short of professional obligations to treat all patients with care and respect. This attitude also implicitly sanctions substandard care to a group of patients who have multiple healthcare needs.

SEAN LONGDEN/REX

Fear and loathing in Glasgow

These thoughts came to me before I embarked on a medical career. In a previous life in the mid-1990s, I worked with drug users in Glasgow, interviewing them for an annual Scottish drug use and HIV study. I heard about their experiences of the healthcare system-they felt treated as second class citizens or dismissed as malingerers.

To recruit people for the study we would drive out to some of the most deprived parts of Glasgow in our “interview unit”-a small mobile home-and encourage those hanging around the streets to come into the warmth for a cup of tea and to complete a questionnaire.

Having grown up in the leafy suburbs of London, I couldn't quite believe my eyes as we parked near burnt out homes and shops protected with razor …

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