All Stories

  1. An overview of take-home naloxone programs in Australia
  2. Take-home naloxone in Australia and beyond
  3. Does training people to administer take-home naloxone increase their knowledge? Evidence from Australian programs
  4. Knowledge of naloxone and take-home naloxone programs among a sample of people who inject drugs in Australia: Variations across capital cities
  5. Assessing causality in drug policy analyses: How useful are the Bradford Hill criteria in analysing take-home naloxone programs?
  6. Book Review
  7. A review of qualitative research inDrug and Alcohol Review
  8. Jugular venipuncture and other innovative approaches to phlebotomy among people who inject drugs
  9. Performance of Kala-Azar Surveillance in Gaffargaon Subdistrict of Mymensingh, Bangladesh
  10. Social sustainability of Mesocyclops biological control for dengue in South Vietnam
  11. Punishing parents: Child removal in the context of drug use
  12. Working together: Expanding the availability of naloxone for peer administration to prevent opioid overdose deaths in the Australian Capital Territory and beyond
  13. Kala-azar in Pregnancy in Mymensingh, Bangladesh: A Social Autopsy
  14. Is there a problem with the status quo? Debating the need for standalone ethical guidelines for research with people who use alcohol and other drugs
  15. Contraception, punishment and women who use drugs
  16. Sexual risk and healthcare seeking behaviour in young Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in North Queensland
  17. Responding to Australia's National Hepatitis B Strategy 2010–13: gaps in knowledge and practice in relation to Indigenous Australians
  18. Context and Environment
  19. Consideration of gender in diagnosis and management of blood-borne viruses: the case of hepatitis C
  20. Reinforced Biographies Among Women Living With Hepatitis C
  21. Positive health beliefs and behaviours in the midst of difficult lives: Women who inject drugs
  22. Young Indigenous Australians' Sexually Transmitted Infection Prevention Practices: A Community-based Participatory Research Project
  23. Learning from the past: young Indigenous people's accounts of blood-borne viral and sexually transmitted infections as resilience narratives
  24. Internal or Infernal Devices: Experiences of Contraception Among Australian Women Living With Hepatitis C
  25. Consuming e: Ecstasy Use and Contemporary Social Life
  26. Sexual and reproductive health ’choice’: women living with contraception