Neighborhood level analyses across 41 communities demonstrate that although rates of illicit drug use were nearly identical across all levels of economic disadvantage, the visibility of drugs, in particular, drug sales were six times more likely in the most disadvantaged neighborhoods compared to the least disadvantaged. Often, efforts to ameliorate drug problems in poorer communities conflate substance use with the visibility of drugs. This study makes clear the need to address the problems associated with the broader drug market served by these communities. Published in the American Journal of Public Health, 2001, 91, 987-1994. [download]
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