Pubdate: Thu, 20 Aug 2009 Source: Nelson Star (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Black Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/4kNvY8sy Website: http://www.nelsonstar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4866 Page: 21 Author: Sam Van Schie, Nelson Star Note: Only published on Thursdays SHAMBHALA MORE THAN A PARTY For Warren Michelow, the Shambhala Music Festival in Salmo last week was more than just a giant party, it was a research environment. Michelow is a PhD student in public health (epidemiology) at University of B.C. His thesis work is on the patterns and health outcomes of multiple drugs in a rave, music festival setting. "The problem with a lot of drug research is not knowing the size of the population you're drawing a sample from; so, there is no denominator for statistics," Michelow explained. "At Shambhala we know how many people are here, so we can get a sense of how this population behaves." Michelow hired a team of professional researchers to administer surveys to more than 300 people at the festival. They found people when they were relaxing on the site and asked for their voluntary participation in the study. The surveys were completely anonymous and participants weren't paid or otherwise reimbursed. They answered questions about how they spent the last 24-hour period: When they slept, when they danced, and most importantly for the research, when they used drugs and how they combined the drugs they did use. Drug use was not a prerequisite of involvement in the survey and researchers found many respondents hadn't used drugs at all during the 24-hour period prior to doing the survey, or they had only used alcohol or marijuana. While Michelow hasn't analyzed the data yet, skimming through the surveys showed significant trends. Surveys were collected each day of the festival and Michelow easily noticed a significant trend of increasingly harder drug use as the festival continued. While a majority reported being sober or just drinking alcohol in the 24-hour period before the first day of the festival, the combination of pot and alcohol took over popularity as the festival began to get underway and in the later days a majority of respondents reported using illicit drugs other than marijuana. "It shows that people are pacing themselves," Michelow said. "What may look like reckless behaviour is actually planned and thought-out in this setting." Michelow said people at Shambhala prefer shorter acting drugs, such as cocaine or ketamine, over longer acting drugs such as LSD. "They want to stay in control of their experience, adding a little more as they need it," Michelow said. This information is useful in the context of harm prevention and adapting strategies to encourage responsible drug use. Michelow said while a lot of drug use research focuses on a specific substance or outcome (for example, how injection drug use contributes to the spread of HIV) recreational drug users are an understudied population. But it's a population Michelow has spent a lot of time working with. He has run The Sanctuary, a safe space at Shambhala, for five years. Over the course of the festival well over 1,000 people come through the sanctuary, and about 200 of those are looking for assistance from the volunteers because they've used too many drugs. "We try to help those people have a positive, constructive experience on the drugs they've used," Michelow said. "They should be able to gain something from the experience and enjoy it." His research, which is funded by the Centre for Addictions Research of B.C., will inform harm reduction efforts like these for other festivals and events, as well as drug use prevention campaigns. He plans to write at least three papers on his research in the next year, as well as provide reports on the findings to the organizers of Shambhala. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart