Abstract
Introduction
Recent years have seen a growth in interest in image and performance enhancing drugs (IPEDs), and the potential risk to public health posed by their use, both in the UK and internationally (Bates & McVeigh, 2016; Bates et al., 2021; Hope et al., 2022; Sagoe & Pallesen, 2018). IPEDs broadly are drugs taken for the purposes of enhancing one’s appearance, sporting performance, sexual function or mood (van de Ven et al., 2019), and are often referred to as “lifestyle medicines,” reflecting the lifestyle-enhancement motivations underpinning much contemporary use (Hall & Antonopoulos, 2016; Kotzé & Antonopoulos, 2021). While the use of IPEDs among sporting competitors and “hardcore” gym cultures (e.g., bodybuilders) has long been explored (Klein, 1995; Monaghan, 2001), recent research has drawn attention to their use among recreational fitness trainers, highlighting a seeming normalization of use among gym-going populations, and other wellness-conscious groups (Brennan et al., 2017; Evans-Brown et al., 2012; Kimergård, 2015; Sagoe et al., 2014).
These trends in contemporary IPED use are important to understand, since these drugs come with a range of potential health risks, from cardiovascular strain and hepatotoxicity, to psychological harms such as depression (Kanayama et al., 2018; McVeigh, Hearne, et al., 2021; McVeigh, Salinas, & Ralphs, 2021). Additionally, with many of the most popular IPEDs being injected, these further carry associated risks of infection, and potential exposure to blood borne viruses (BBV; Bates & McVeigh, 2016; Hope et al., 2013), even if BBV risk is lower for those injecting steroids (via intramuscular (IM) injections) than for intravenous (IV) drug users (see Underwood, 2019). Consequently, a number of researchers have highlighted the need to situate IPED use within a public health perspective, focusing on how harms may be reduced through policies such as needle and syringe programs (NSP), education, engagement with health practitioners, and peer outreach schemes (Bates et al., 2021; Kimergård & McVeigh, 2014; McVeigh & Begley, 2017; Piatkowski et al., 2022).
While academic discourse around IPEDs increasingly acknowledges the importance of harm reduction for users (Bates et al., 2022), it is clear there remain gaps in our understanding regarding how best to serve specific populations (Hope et al., 2022; McVeigh, Hearne, et al., 2021). With IPED use being highly heterogenous (van de Ven et al., 2019), much work has acknowledged the extent to which interventions must be tailored to the different practices, motivations and harm profiles of users (Christiansen et al., 2017; Harvey et al., 2021; Vinther & Christiansen, 2019). Consequently, a range of user typologies have been developed which attempt to bridge this knowledge gap, with several works looking to match user risk behaviors to factors such as subcultural affiliation or motivations for training, as heuristics for guiding harm reduction (Christiansen et al., 2017; Turnock, 2018; Zahnow et al., 2018). While such typologies can be useful, much of this research has lacked in-depth exploration of how use and harms may be shaped by social geographic and structural factors (Salinas et al., 2019), including around the impacts of rurality/urbanity.
While much research has noted the links between masculinities, embodiment and IPED use, for example (e.g., Andreasson & Johansson, 2016; Klein, 1995; Kotzé & Antonopoulos, 2021; Piatkowski et al., 2020), masculinities are not only diverse and changing (Anderson, 2010; Maycock, 2018), but are shaped by social geographic, economic and cultural factors (Ellis, 2016; McDowell, 2011; Nayak, 2003) which may in turn influence approaches to IPED use (Gibbs, Salinas, & Turnock, 2022). Beyond this, with IPEDs taken not only for image or sporting enhancement, but also for therapeutic purposes such as injury repair and rehabilitation (Turnock, 2022), in addition to their associations with specific forms of physical work (Hanley Santos & Coomber, 2017; Monaghan, 2002; Whyte et al., 2021a), it is clear how motivations for their use may correlate with factors such as levels of economic distress or prevalence of hard physical labor in a given population. Effective harm reduction policy for IPEDs must therefore account not only for user “types,” but must also acknowledge the geographic, cultural and structural conditions surrounding use and harms (Hanley Santos & Coomber, 2017; van de Ven et al., 2018), integrating “place” into IPED research in line with developments in the broader drugs literature (e.g., Cooper & Tempalski, 2014).
Research in rural sociology and rural criminology has long pointed out that distinct features of rural environments, including locational context but also cultural geography, may shape and impact upon issues such as public health and criminal justice (Barclay et al., 2004; Leider et al., 2020). With attention to IPEDs, while Dunn et al. (2016) note the need for specific research into IPED users in regional and rural areas, comparatively little analysis in the years since has focused on the impacts of rurality on IPED use, harms and service access. Similarly, Hope et al. (2022), in exploring the existing evidence base surrounding IPED use in the UK context, note the need for further work exploring geographic variations in use and service access as a key next step for researchers, particularly in relation to NSP engagement. Building on these suggestions, the present research seeks to contribute to this gap in the literature through exploring how rural IPED users in the UK may differ in their risk profiles and approach to urban and semi- or sub-urban populations. With the literature on drug harms more broadly increasingly highlighting the significance of rurality as a risk factor, and rural users of other drugs noted as having distinct risk profiles to urban and suburban users (Thomas et al., 2020), it is clear the specific challenges that rurality presents in relation to IPED harms must be explored, in order to provide effective harm reduction for this population. This shall be done through examining issues identified by a sample of 18 IPED users in remote South-West England in relation to service access and IPED harms, as well as exploration of how broader aspects of rurality and rural masculinities may also impact upon IPED use and harms.
Rurality and the Rural “Risk Environment”
In order to fully contextualize findings, it is important to first situate our understanding of rurality and rural geographies as risk factors for drug harms. The risk environment approach is a framework developed by Rhodes (2002), which positions harm as contingent upon social context, comprising interactions between individuals and environments (Rhodes, 2009). It moves beyond potentially reductive perspectives that analyze only risk
The risk environment framework has previously been applied to IPED use and harms by Hanley Santos and Coomber (2017), who looked to examine the macro-structural, cultural and personal conditions that contribute to harms and hinder effective harm reduction behaviors among IPED users in an English city. They observed a number of areas where harms were shaped by these factors, including in relation to NSP access and the management of risk by users, in addition to factors such as employment-related IPED use in the regional economy. With recent literature using the risk environment framework to examine illicit drug harms more broadly in the context of rural communities (Fadanelli et al., 2020; Ibragimov et al., 2020; Jenkins & Hagan, 2020; Kolak et al., 2020), a synthesis of Hanley Santos and Coomber’s (2017) risk environment approach to IPEDs with key developments from the rural drug harms literature may therefore help facilitate greater understanding of the factors influencing harm among rural IPED users.
Rurality itself is a disputed concept (Cloke, 2006), and is therefore worth unpacking to contextualize understanding of the “rural risk environment” (Ibragimov et al., 2020). In addition to quantitative representations of rurality, such as population density or distances to core services and infrastructure, central to many definitions are qualitative elements in which rurality is inherently framed by understandings of class, power and (geographic, economic, political) remoteness, with distance—both physical and cultural—important to understanding the behaviors and values of rural residents (Cloke, 2006; Shucksmith, 2012). Many explorations of rural geographies highlight how this remoteness is expressed through perceptions of regional neglect (Willet, 2009), cultural and political opposition to “elites” and perceived “urban” cultural norms (Bye, 2009; Lunz Trujillo, 2022; Willet et al., 2019), and the formation of close community networks oriented around the reproduction of values (Shucksmith, 2012). While rurality may have features beyond remoteness and self-reliance as cultural values, such as the importance of countryside, wilderness, an agricultural economy or trappings of the “rural idyl” (Cloke, 2006; Hillyard, 2008), from the perspective of understanding drug harms and service access, these defining characteristics are the most important to consider.
Research into rural health access has consequently explored issues linked to both geographic and economic distance, as well as the cultural aspects to rurality that may impact upon help-seeking behaviors (Noone & Stephens, 2008; Russell et al., 2013). These issues impact upon the rural risk environment for drug harms, with much of the literature noting issues relating to not only a lack of service provision and transportation infrastructure in rural geographies, but also broader socio-economic factors, relating to lack of opportunity and decline, and socio-cultural changes which may shape drug using behaviors, and service access (Kolak et al., 2020; Thomas et al., 2020). Such factors intersect with broader cultural features of rurality such as heightened feelings of stigma in close-knit communities where persons are known and reputations important, leaving service access a significant issue for many rural drug users (Jenkins & Hagan, 2019; Showalter, 2020; Thomas et al., 2020).
Geographic, economic and structural risk factors further combine with cultural and social features of rurality in relation to gender, and rural conceptions of masculinity. As noted, masculinities have been considered in several explorations of IPED use (e.g., Gibbs, Salinas, & Turnock, 2022), and with the majority of steroid users being men (Bates & McVeigh, 2016; Sagoe & Pallesen, 2018), understanding how masculinities may shape IPED use and engagement with harm reduction services is an important topic for harm reduction researchers to address. Much research into rural masculinities has noted the harms which correlate with the “orthodox” masculine ideals prevalent in many rural locales (e.g., Carrington et al., 2013), with some of these harms being relevant to rural men’s healthcare and service access. Principally, how the internalization of notions of the rural “real man” and “self-stigma” may act as barriers to help-seeking in rural masculinities (Bryant & Garnham, 2015; Coen et al., 2013), with such issues likely compounding on top of concerns regarding stigma and opposition to accessing medical services seen for IPED users more broadly (Harvey et al., 2020; Piatkowski et al., 2022; Simmonds & Coomber, 2009). Understanding such influences as part of the rural “risk environment” will therefore help better contextualize harms within rural IPED-using populations, allowing for more effective policy formation that acknowledges the different circumstances which frame harm in rural geographies.
Method
Findings are drawn from a multi-year ethnography undertaken by the first author in nine gyms in the remote Devon & Cornwall peninsula of the UK, which sought to explore gym cultures, gender and IPED use in the region. The peninsula has been described as both a remote rural geography, and a place of significant relative deprivation (Bosworth & Willet, 2011; Willet, 2009), with Cornwall among the poorest in the UK by GDP per capita (Eurostat, 2019). While Devon fares somewhat better (though remains significantly below the UK average GDP per capita (Eurostat, 2019)), its remote coastal towns nonetheless fall in the “most deprived” category in the English government’s Indices of Deprivation (IoD, 2019), and have been identified as “distant/isolated” geographies in prior research into illicit drug markets and harm (Coomber & Moyle, 2018). Consequently, while not as remote or deprived as rural geographies in other countries, the small towns studied nonetheless serve as some of the best examples of remote rural locales in the UK, especially England.
While “formal” data collection for the research occurred between 2014 and 2017, findings draw on the first author’s experiences as a gym user in the region, spanning from 2010 to 2020, encompassing hundreds of hours of observation and conversations in a variety of gyms, including both “hardcore” and more “commercial” establishments. “Hardcore” gyms are often associated with urban, post-industrial locales (Antonopoulos & Hall, 2016; Kotzé & Antonopoulos, 2021; Salinas et al., 2019), and seen as spaces where masculine performances of graft and craft associated with cities’ traditional industry are now enacted in the leisure economy, as a substitute space for masculine capital and fraternity (Gibbs, Salinas, & Turnock, 2022). While rural locales may be less typically associated with hardcore gyms, there have been similar trends toward these spaces as sites for the development of substitute masculine capital in rural towns, even where traditional industries such as farming, logging and quarries may persist. This may be linked to the rise of automation and casualization in local industries (Gibbs, Salinas, & Turnock, 2022), along with broader cultural and economic shifts that are shaping the ways in which contemporary rural men seek to acquire masculine capital and identity (Turnock, 2021). The prominence of the military as a career path in rural regions, and norms of physical capital linked to this, may also shape the development of hardcore gym spaces in these locales (Turnock, 2021).
While a portion of the research was undertaken in the region’s main port city, field sites also incorporated several independent “hardcore” gyms located in remote towns (
In addition to observational and conversational data gathered in gyms, a total of 36 semi-structured qualitative interviews were undertaken for the project, 18 of which were conducted with individuals specifically engaged based on their perceived knowledge of IPED use and markets, 17 of whom were male. Perceptions of knowledge regarding IPEDs used in recruitment were based on the first author’s informal discussions with participants when conducting initial observation work in gyms. In these conversations, many individuals would talk about their steroid use and experiences buying or selling, and were consequently asked if they would be willing to participate in an interview on the subject. Some were further recruited through “snowball” sampling, as initial interviewees recommended others whom they thought would be knowledgeable and willing to speak on the topic. These participants included a range of powerlifting competitors, gym owners, personal trainers, and open steroid users and suppliers (with some overlap between these categories). IPED use and harms formed key themes in these 18 interviews, including discussion of users’ approaches to harm minimization and engagement with harm reduction services, which forms some of the primary data cited in this article. The remaining 18 participants were interviewed more broadly on topics relating to gender and gym cultures, and while not specifically engaged regarding IPED use, were able to offer some insights into how rurality, class and masculinities are relevant to understanding harms in these gym cultures, in addition to broader observations regarding their personal perceptions of others’ drug use. Interviews across both portions of the research project lasted an average of 1 hr.
Analysis of both interview data and ethnographic field-note data was conducted following a constructivist grounded theory approach (Charmaz, 2014; Glaser & Strauss, 2017). Analysis followed the constant comparative method to the development of conceptual categories which were systematically “worked out” with reference to new and emerging fieldwork data, in the course of simultaneous data collection and analysis, followed by subsequent re-analysis once categories had been refined. The grounded theory approach has been adopted by others researching body cultures as it can better reflect the “realities” of cultural participants surveyed (Monaghan, 2001; Watson, 2000). Coding and analysis was undertaken manually by the first author without specialist software, so that the full contexts and narrative relevance of transcript and field diary data could be accounted for.
The first author’s positionality as both a researcher, but also a participant in gym cultures who grew up in the region studied, are also important to acknowledge as shaping both my interest in this topic, as well as the construction of findings (Charmaz, 2014). With ethnography a collaboration between the researcher and researched (Blackman, 2016), my status as a semi-“cultural insider” is important to highlight, as this aided in access and cultural understanding, but may also have led to my potentially overlooking data that would appear significant to a cultural outsider, but which I considered cultural norms (Taylor & Potter, 2013). Nonetheless, the access and cultural understanding offered by my biography are felt to outweigh these limitations, and the use of “insider” understandings in this work parallels that drawn on by other researchers in this field (Piatkowski et al., 2022).
Research was conducted with ethics approval from the University of Plymouth, as part of the first author’s doctoral studies.
Findings
This section shall explore the four key themes which arose from interviews and ethnographic findings in relation to the impacts of rurality/remoteness on participants’ IPED use and experience of harms, particularly regarding their engagement with harm reduction services. These were, in turn, issues linked with: Limited service provision and poor transportation links; heightened stigma associated with accessing NSP in a small town context; distrust of institutions and regional employment concerns; and the impacts of rural masculinities and cultural norms on help-seeking and IPED using behaviors.
Limited Services and Transport Links
Much IPED harm minimization policy to date has focused on the dissemination of sterile injecting equipment and information on safe use through NSP, along with similar establishments such as specialist “steroid clinics” (Kimergård & McVeigh, 2014; McVeigh & Begley, 2017), with IPED users having been the primary clients of many NSP for some years now (Kimergård, 2015; Kimergård & McVeigh, 2014). In a recent Delphi study, Hope et al. (2022) estimate that between 25% and 40% of IPED users in the UK access NSP, a figure which justifies the focus on these establishments in much harm reduction work, while also acknowledging that broader interventions must be considered. Ethnographic observations in the present research suggest that for those living in the peripheral South-West, however, the 25%–40% NSP engagement figure is likely to be a sizeable over-estimate.
Across multiple interviews and conversations conducted in the region’s gyms, it was observed that a significant number of participants either did not access NSP themselves, or relayed that they knew other users in their gyms did not do so. One established trainer in a small town gym estimated “ [The] needles I got on eBay…I think it cost me about eight quid for a pack of a hundred needles, and about twelve quid for a hundred syringes. 8 am train cancelled. 9 am train cancelled. 10 am train turns up, half coaches missing, already full and standing. Bus service sucks too. One hour travel [to the city, and] it costs less to travel across Central London [than local fares].
While most towns large enough to have a gym will also have a pharmacy, which may provide sterile injecting equipment, one specialist drug service provider interviewed in the broader research—the “steroid lead” at her organization—noted that pharmacy chains would tend to simply have “packs” on hand for steroid users, containing needles, a sharps bin and basic information sheet, and would not generally be involved in knowledge exchange regarding safe use beyond this. While specialist NSP services in larger towns and cities will generally have experts who can advise on safe injecting practice, in small towns the extent of harm reduction services might therefore be limited to such “pick up and drop off” schemes, without any substantial harm minimization advice being offered. Consequently, harm reduction interventions beyond simple equipment provision are much more difficult for rural populations who cannot travel to specialist services, even in towns where some means of needle exchange is accessible. This may be linked to broader issues with the lack of funding for specialist NSP services in general, with even urban locales often featuring few of these, and most access occurring through pharmacies without specialist knowledge being offered. The tendency to prefer peer supply or online access among IPED-using participants may therefore correlate with perceptions that the only accessible services do not come with any particular advantage compared to these, but could present further challenges and barriers that peer supply does not (unpacked in the next section).
Additionally, with not all pharmacies providing needle exchange services, and uncertainty regarding which ones did among IPED users, for those in small towns without specialist NSP providers or even multiple pharmacies, it is clear that poor transport links have a disproportionate impact on their ability to access harm reduction services. In the context of long-standing public services being shut down in rural locales under austerity (Willet et al., 2019), including small town hospitals, police stations and other sites closing in the region during the (post-recession) research period, it is perhaps unsurprising there were few establishments offering specialist NSP services, particularly those tailored to IPED users explicitly, in many smaller towns in remote areas. Discussion of IPED use and harm reduction must therefore acknowledge the challenges that rurality and distance may present to accessing services in the context of poor transport links outside of most urban and semi-urban locales.
Small Town Stigma and Service Access
Importantly, even among those who could feasibly access a needle exchange, many voiced hesitation around doing so owing to fears of the stigma attached to accessing these services. Stigma is a recurring theme in research into IPED users, with Simmonds and Coomber (2009) noting this group often fear association with “stereotypical” injecting drug users (IDUs) when accessing NSP, which Harvey et al. (2020) observe can lead to users avoiding NSP establishments, thus missing out on harm reduction information delivered in these spaces. While stigma through association with other IDUs can impact on service access, research has also noted the stigma attached to IPED use itself, with Richardson and Antonopoulos (2019) observing this resulted in participants even lying to medical professionals regarding their IPED use, over fear of their loved ones discovering it. With stigma impacting NSP access for IPED users more broadly, it is therefore important to consider how the barriers created by stigma may be exacerbated in a rural, small town context. Notably, aspects of stigma and related shame are likewise reflected in the criminological literature which has shown how victims of domestic and family violence may choose not to report their victimization due to issues of social density, and in particular that the abuser may have strong community connections, including with the police and local authorities, combined with an absence of infrastructure and transportation which further discourages reporting crime and seeking help (see Campo & Tayton, 2015).
With even basic needle exchange provision often limited to a single establishment in remote towns, and poor transportation links between towns, rural IPED users may face their only accessible NSP being located in an establishment where they are likely to be seen and recognized by people they know when entering. Small town norms of surveillance, and community interest in residents’ behaviors and lack of anonymity have long been explored in research into rural drug users, with much work noting the impact these norms can have on perceptions of stigma, and willingness to access services (Allen et al., 2019; Browne et al., 2016; Hammarlund et al., 2018; Thomas et al., 2020). Extrapolating this to rural IPED users, it is clear that IPED use—particularly to the extent that it links to broader stigma against IDUs—will thus be similarly subject to such norms of cultural surveillance, and heightened perceptions of stigma. Concerns regarding the impacts of stigma on IPED users’ NSP access more broadly are thus magnified by rurality, given social density and the increased probability of being recognized when accessing services, and the consequences this may have: You can go to Boots and get [needles], but I know people who work in Boots, so I don’t really want them to have it that I’ve got a bin full of needles. (Simon)
The impact of the lack of knowledge exchange associated with acquiring needles through such alternative sources was visible in several participants’ observations regarding poor injection practice they had witnessed. Dan, a bodybuilder, discussed an acquaintance who had started using steroids, and had come to him for advice after experiencing bad pain at his injection sites. Dan noted he had needed to explain to this acquaintance that he was using the wrong needles, which was causing the pain: I explained to him, like “mate, it’s cos you’re injecting into your fat cells, you’ve got to use the greens [21G/38 mm needle] so it actually reaches the muscle.” He’d bought the short ones cos they looked less scary, thought they were just as good.
While most participants from hardcore gym subcultures such as powerlifters learnt appropriate injecting practice from experienced peers (as with Dan, above), for other participants their knowledge regarding things such as the correct needles for particular muscle groups was something they had acquired through trial and error, or through equally inexperienced peers, owing to their perceived inability to access services which could provide this, whether caused by remoteness, fears of stigma, or a combination of the two. While internet forums were noted by some participant as enabling their acquisition of appropriate knowledge regarding IPEDs, potentially minimizing the divide between rural and urban populations’ understandings of use, prior research has discussed the limitations of information available in these spaces (see Tighe et al., 2017), including noting how even where good advice is offered, it may be difficult for non-cultural participants to parse what is legitimate versus potentially harmful advice (Turnock & Townshend, 2022). As such, the impact of stigma on NSP access in rural geographies likely still affects harm reduction knowledge levels, even if internet access facilitates some degree of independent knowledge acquisition.
Notably, even among participants who did access NSP, the impact of stigma in the rural context was visible. For instance, while powerlifter Rich often drove an hour to the city in order to train in a specialist powerlifting gym, and could then anonymously access NSP while in the city, he nonetheless discussed how he would often pick up needles for friends while there, so they did not have to visit a local needle exchange themselves, noting: Not everyone wants to go there, do they? You know, people don’t want to be seen there, or it’s inconvenient or whatever…[so] if I went in there I would pick needles up for whoever wanted them.
Heightened stigma in the small town context thus combined with transportation issues, and resulted in many injecting IPED users avoiding accessing harm reduction services even where provided. These findings correlate with the literature regarding broader drug harms in rural communities, where the close-knit nature of communities, and lack of alternative services have been identified as risk factors (Jenkins & Hagan, 2020; Showalter, 2020; Thomas et al., 2020), and also highlights why estimates drawn from NSP data are likely to greatly underestimate rates of IPED use in more rural regions relative to urban or sub-urban ones, even when accounting for the degree of stigma and avoidance observed for urban IPED-using populations.
Institutional Trust and Regional Employment Concerns
Building on the barriers that rural social and cultural norms presented to accessing harm reduction services, a further barrier identified related to institutional distrust, particularly of the medical community. IPED users have historically had an adversarial relationship with healthcare providers (HCP), with much work documenting the distrust of doctors within these communities, whom they often do not trust to give valuable advice regarding IPED use, and who are perceived as unfairly stigmatizing users (Bonnecaze et al., 2020; Piatkowski et al., 2022; Pope et al., 2004; Zahnow et al., 2017). While a distrust of HCP has been observed across many IPED-using cultures, in deprived rural regions this may extend further, owing to the realities of employment prospects for working-class men in these regions.
The significance of the military in the region studied is important to focus on in relation to harms arising from institutional distrust, as this was discussed by several participants as impacting their behaviors. With many working-class young men in the region citing limited career prospects for those who remained, the armed forces were highlighted by several as a perceived “way out,” with multiple participants discussing their plans to join one of the service branches. With the peninsula home to key military bases and training facilities, and with the military often undertaking recruitment outreach in schools in the region, there was a strong link with military service and the motivations of many working-class gym users surveyed (see Turnock, 2021a).
Despite the apparent prevalence of IPED use and knowledge within the forces (Hanley-Santos & Coomber, 2017; Whyte et al., 2021a), the selection process requires both medical and criminal record checks, and applicants are warned that drug use, including steroids, may be disqualifying. Indeed, one senior Navy officer interviewed confirmed to the first author that he had kicked service members out for steroid use. Consequently, despite the clear relationship between military ideals and enhancement drug use, with some participants noting they were using enhancers to train for the “beasting” sessions they would face upon joining, for many whose future plans revolved around military service, the prospect of having steroid use on their medical records was a strong motivating factor to not see HCP regarding any harms experienced relating to use or cessation, which could result in a black mark against them.
The significance of this in the context of IPED harms could be seen most starkly in one participant developing what he worried might be testicular cancer following a steroid cycle, noting one testicle was twice the size of the other, but going to online fitness forums to seek advice on what he should do, rather than immediately contacting his GP. Explaining his thought process to me some time after the fact, and justifying why he had not immediately sought treatment, the participant noted it was: ‘cos I didn’t want to go to the doctor and tell him I was messing around with steroids, and have that on my medical records permanently.
Rural Masculinities and Cultural Influences
Finally, it is worth considering how rural cultural ideals of masculinity more broadly may tie in with non-engagement with HCP, and broader IPED-related harms. Rural masculinities are often conceptualized as “orthodox” masculinities, celebrating ideals of stoicism, self-reliance and similar attributes above all, all of which may correlate with harm (Coen et al., 2013; Creighton et al., 2017). Beyond the above-noted concerns over employment prospects and medical records, rural men’s resistance to help-seeking more broadly is significant to examine, with the literature particularly highlighting issues in relation to depression and mental health issues. Several studies of suicide and harm in rural communities have explored rural men’s reluctance to seek help over fears that doing so is a sign of weakness, and that it undermines their masculine self-conception to do so (Alston & Kent, 2008; Bryant & Garnham, 2015; Coen et al., 2013). With depressive symptoms being one of the key negative side-effects associated with steroid use, and particularly cessation of use (Kanayama et al., 2008; Pope & Katz, 1994), it is likely that resistance to help-seeking rooted in orthodox conceptions of masculinity may be significant to IPED users’ non-engagement with HCP over such issues, and several participants discussed either their own or friends’ struggles with steroid-related (and other) depression, for which they had not sought help. While deliberately avoiding help-seeking is an issue with masculinity in society more broadly (Clearly, 2012; Johnson et al., 2012; Oliffe et al., 2020), this may be exacerbated in regions where certain cultural ideals of the stoic “real man” are more prevalent, with gym-going men in rural and deprived post-industrial locales particularly liable to subscribe to such notions of masculinity (see Turnock, 2021a).
Non-engagement with services rooted in cultural conceptions of masculinity may be relevant to all manner of harms beyond depression, of course, and research has identified the reluctance of men with more “orthodox” masculinities to engage with health services for a range of conditions and reasons, including notions of self-reliance and a belief one should handle problems oneself, as well as potential feelings of embarrassment over engaging with services (Bryant & Garnham, 2015; Noone & Stephens, 2008). Once again, we see similar findings as it relates to the reporting of crime. Specifically, Harkness (2017) notes that farmers in rural Victoria, Australia were more likely to deal with victimization without the involvement of criminal justice agencies in part on account of subscribing to the view that they could take care of it themselves or, adopting an Australian expression, the view that “we kill our own snakes in the bush.”
It is therefore likely that beyond geographic factors limiting engagement with NSP and HCP, there may be a certain degree of “self-stigma” relating to masculine conceptions of the self-acting as a barrier to some male IPED users accessing harm reduction services, which may be more prevalent in certain social geographies (Turnock, 2021a). Indeed, while blood tests and similar wellbeing checks are increasingly promoted for IPED users on fitness-related social media pages (Gibbs, Cox, & Turnock, 2022), only one participant in the present research proactively sought out medical advice and health monitoring regarding his plans to use, suggesting this sample had particularly low engagement with medical services, even accounting for degrees of stigma-related resistance documented elsewhere (e.g., Harvey et al., 2020). Understanding the impacts of culturally and geographically bounded conceptions of masculinity on stigma and self-stigma may therefore be a further way of addressing the harms caused by non-engagement within populations where this is likely to be a greater risk, particularly when situated in relevant structural and employment contexts such as prevalence of “military masculinities” (Turnock, 2021a; Whyte et al., 2021b), as noted above.
Beyond the impacts of stoic ideals of masculinity and barriers to help-seeking created by these, broader issues potentially associated with orthodox masculinities are also worth considering in relation to IPED harms, particularly regarding the impacts of notions of the macho “real man” and importance of male “toughness” prevalent in many rural cultures (Campbell et al., 2006; Carrington & Scott, 2008; Leap, 2020; Tyler & Fairbrother, 2013). While gyms in many locales feature discussion of training as “hard graft,” and offer the opportunity to performatively show one’s toughness (Fussell, 1991; Gibbs, Salinas, & Turnock, 2022) in rural locales where these values are dominant, this may manifest in shows of “toughness” akin to or directly inspired by military hazing or “beasting” (Turnock, 2021a; Whyte et al., 2021b). Notions that “real men” should continue training and grafting through pain and injury might plausibly correlate with the use of drugs specifically to continue training among those who subscribe to such ideals, creating further risks of harm.
Indeed, some participants noted their use of substances specifically to enhance repair and their ability to train when injured, such as deca-durabolin or boldenone to “lubricate” injured joints, and human growth hormone to speed up injury recovery. At its most extreme, one powerlifter bragged about squatting heavy two weeks after a hamstring tear which should have been rested for months, using IPEDs to allow him to get back to training faster. Although such hardcore lifters are not generally the highest-risk users, generally understanding the drugs they are taking better than more casual, YOLO-type users (Christiansen et al., 2017; Turnock, 2018), such findings nonetheless indicate how risky drug-using behaviors may correlate with culturally bounded ideas of the “tough guy real man” in these cultures, which may be more prevalent in certain geographies.
Similarly, as IPED use becomes more common for wellness optimization purposes (Dunn et al., 2021; Turnock, 2022; Underwood et al., 2021), it is plausible the prevalence of physical labor in a region will also impact on the use of IPEDs for repair, as users look to offset pain related to laboring. In the present sample, despite the focus being on gym-goers, some respondents nonetheless noted that their wellbeing-oriented IPED use also helped to reduce pain when they were working, with one participant noting his main motivation for IPED use was: my joints when I’m at work. Having good joints to me [is more important] than some obscure worry about getting cancer or heart disease in twenty years’ time.
Building on this, it is finally important to consider how harms relating to polydrug use among rural IPED-using populations might also differ from those in other geographies. Several studies have highlighted correlations between IPED use and the use of a variety of polydrugs, particularly stimulants, and how user motivations and cultural factors shape these, suggesting this is an important area for harm reduction efforts to focus on (Piatkowski et al., 2021; Salinas et al., 2019; Zahnow et al., 2020). With much work documenting the link between rurality and opioid harms (particularly in the US), often linked with deprivation and a cultural inheritance of hard labor in these regions (e.g., Cloud et al., 2019; Leukefeld et al., 2007), it is interesting to consider the links between rural geographies and such drug use in the context of IPED users, despite the UK not witnessing the same degree of issues with rural opioid harms as seen in, for example, the US (Turnock, 2021b).
As with the suggestion that IPED use may be linked to desires to continue “grafting” through pain and injury, whether in the gym or when laboring, poly-use of opioids to mask pain may similarly be heightened in regions where there is either a prevalence of hard physical work, or a cultural inheritance of this and decline of industry. In Turnock (2021b) the prevalence of opioid use was discussed in the context of powerlifters in remote regions using these drugs to deal with injury pain and bodily strains, and these findings are likely indicative of a need for increased awareness of harms associated with such use among other rural populations, where opioid access may be somewhat normalized for strain-related pain relief (Thomas et al., 2020). While opioid use among gym goers is by no means unique to rural locales or those holding rural conceptions of masculinity (Sagoe et al., 2015), it is nonetheless clear that geographic influences are worth paying attention to when discussing harm reduction for rural IPED-using populations, and those in more deprived regions where opioids and similar drugs are more prevalent will likely need interventions which explicitly acknowledge this form of polydrug use, despite stimulant and alcohol use remaining a greater polydrug risk for IPED users more broadly (Piatkowski et al., 2021; Zahnow et al., 2020).
Discussion and Conclusion
While transport limitations and physical access to specialist services were highlighted as issues by participants, this was generally identified as an exacerbating factor on top of more significant barriers, surrounding perceptions of stigma and distrust of HCPs. While there are many similarities between rural users’ reasons for non-engagement with these services and observations in works exploring other IPED-using populations (Harvey et al., 2020; Simmonds & Coomber, 2009), the compounding effects of rurality and living in a remote deprived area exacerbated these issues, with the impacts of small town surveillance and stigma, as well as greater concerns over the personal impacts of being identified as a user on employment prospects clearly coming through in the research findings. As such, while not greatly distinct from the barriers identified in the broader IPED harm reduction literature, the findings of this research nonetheless support the suggestion that more attention needs to be given to variations in use and service access based on geographic and linked factors (Dunn et al., 2016; Hope et al., 2022), contributing to addressing the observed gap in the literature here. Additionally, findings also support the suggestion that estimates regarding levels of use in given geographies based on NSP data may not offer a reliable picture of the realities of use in a given population (Hope et al., 2022), highlighting the need for continued in-depth research into these cultures across geographies.
Findings regarding barriers to service access contribute to the increasing body of work regarding how harm reduction can be better tailored to suit the needs and desires of IPED-using populations, and increase their engagement with NSP, HCP and other services (Harvey et al., 2020; Piatkowski et al., 2022; Zahnow et al., 2017). Anonymity was a key theme which came through in this research, both in relation to the need to access injecting equipment and advice in a context where one could not be identified by neighbors and friends, made difficult by small town contexts, as well as in relation to being able to seek health advice and monitoring without risking this being permanently recorded on medical records, in a way which could harm future employment prospects. Deprivation and the lack of career prospects thus constituted a key aspect of the risk environment of the men surveyed, with class playing a significant role in access to harm reduction services in the research. With many perceiving they had few career prospects outside of the military owing to their working-class rural backgrounds, it is clear how the intersections of class and distance shaped the risks to which they were exposed, owing to the barriers these created to accessing harm reduction services. On a smaller scale, this economic stratification also played out in differences in ability to travel to more urban locales, with those who could drive to specialist NSP able to access better information and services than those who could not, who had to rely on the supply of needles and harm reduction information from those who did. Economic deprivation and class thus shape the rural risk environment for IPED users, and the ability of public health to deliver effective harm reduction to this population.
With recent research exploring the ways in which health services may better address the needs of IPED users to increase engagement (Atkinson et al., 2021; Bates et al., 2021; Harvey et al., 2020), awareness regarding how concerns over stigma and a need for anonymity may vary geographically, and be heightened within certain user populations, particularly among those from deprived rural backgrounds, will also be worth considering in continued policy development. It is clear, however, that hesitance to engage with HCP may be more pronounced among specific populations, and concerns regarding employment in particular may make increasing HCP’s knowledge of IPEDs an insufficient—albeit still valuable—approach to addressing the lack of help seeking within these populations. Focusing on how to encourage engagement among populations who may believe their future careers and life goals could be at risk in doing so, as well as those who are too remote to access regular harm reduction services, is therefore important in reducing the risks identified in this article.
With both physical barriers and a perceived need to access advice without being seen or recorded key factors in the present research, it is worth noting the suggestion from recent works that peer mentors conducting outreach in gyms might be an effective policy for increasing engagement with harm reduction advice and services (Gibbs, Cox, & Turnock, 2022; Piatkowski et al., 2022), as this would address the key concerns raised by rural gym users in each of these domains. With the more informed IPED users in the present research (competitive powerlifters and bodybuilders) often obtaining their initial knowledge through more experienced peers in gyms, following patterns observed elsewhere (van de Ven & Mulrooney, 2017), it is clear that policies which utilize such culturally embedded peer networks have scope to be adopted in remote gyms, if effective harm reduction training can be provided for reputable gym members. While there are questions regarding the precise logistics of how such harm reduction outreach should operate, and the specific resources required, this is an area that is currently being focused on by both researchers and community participants (Gibbs, Cox, & Turnock, 2022). With both community outreach workers and mobile harm reduction outreach having been shown to be effective policies in other contexts (e.g., Owczarzak et al., 2020; Shorter et al., 2022), this is likely an appropriate avenue to focus on, given such outreach would particularly benefit gym users facing barriers to accessing existing services, and reduce the identified issues with stigma and concerns over medical records. Policies such as trained outreach workers are therefore likely to be an even more valuable avenue for policy makers to pursue when considering remote/rural users than in contexts previously explored.
While the impact of masculinities is perhaps harder to unpack, findings nonetheless indicate that cultural conceptions of masculinity must be considered in discussing IPED use and harm, even when focusing on service access. Work to address issues in HCP access must consider not only perceptions of stigma among IPED users, but also appropriate messaging to navigate self-stigma surrounding healthcare access among rural men, and other geographic populations where orthodox conceptions of masculinity are more prevalent. With recent discussions highlighting the importance of addressing self-stigma around help seeking among suicidal men (e.g., Clary et al., 2021; Oliffe et al., 2020), policies which consider how to shift understandings of masculinity in relation to help-seeking more broadly may also contribute to the issue of IPED users’ non-engagement with services, particularly in geographies where such narratives of masculinity are dominant.
Of course, these characteristics of rurality are not experienced in isolation, and it is the compounding nature of which may drive user behavior and risk harmful outcomes. Indeed, going back to the example on domestic and family violence, it is not only an issue of social density and access to services, but also wider socio-cultural change in relation to gender roles and expressions of masculinity as well as how may be impacted and shaped by economic decline. Likewise, is it necessary to consider holistically the myriad ways in which locational context and cultural geography may shape IPED use and access to related services, including associated harms and opportunities for intervention.
While this research has made contributions to knowledge in relation to the ways in which rurality shapes IPED use, harms and service access, findings also suggest a need for continued in-depth research into geographic variations in relation to these factors, as argued by Hope et al. (2022). Significantly, with drug policy an important aspect of the risk environment for IPED users (Henning & Andreasson, 2022), continued work examining geographic variations in differing international policies contexts is likely to be significant. With the UK something of an outlier in its approach to steroids—criminalizing supply but decriminalizing possession (Bates et al., 2021)—further work into how policy contexts shape the risk environment (Henning & Andreasson, 2022) is likely to compliment continued examination of geographic impacts, particularly in countries where there exist greater distances and cultural divides between rural and (sub)urban populations than in the UK, and harms may be exaggerated further still.
Finally, while this article has focused on harms associated with IPED use, it is important to acknowledge that IPED supply may also be shaped by other geographic factors, which may also impact on the risk environment of users. While Turnock (2021b) discusses how geography may shape IPED and polydrug markets, specific work investigating the impacts that rurality has on supply and access will likely be beneficial to understanding rural users’ risk environment, following understanding from works examining illicit drug markets (Moyle & Coomber, 2018; Thomas et al., 2020). With recent works discussing harms linked to disruption in IPED markets owing to Covid-19 lockdowns (Dunn & Piatkowski, 2021; Gibbs, 2021), and rural markets likely to be particularly susceptible to disruption, this highlights a need for ongoing work investigating rural IPED-using populations and harms more broadly.
