Gay chemsex orgy
Prática de chemsex entre homens que fazem sexo com homens (HSH) durante período de isolamento social por COVID-19: pesquisa online multicêntrica
ARTIGO • Cad. Saúde Pública 36 (12) • 2020 • https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311X00202420linkcopiar
Práctica de chemsex entre hombres que practican sexo con hombres (HSH) durante período de aislamiento social por la COVID-19: una encuesta multicéntrica en línea
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Investigar os fatores associados à prática do sexo sob o efeito de drogas (chemsex) entre homens que fazem sexo com homens (HSH) durante período de isolamento social, no contexto da pandemia da COVID-19. Inquérito multicêntrico online, aplicado aos territórios de Brasil e Portugal em abril de 2020, enquanto os dois países vivenciavam medidas sanitárias restritivas para a doença. Os participantes foram recrutados valendo-se de uma adaptação do método respondent driven sampling (RDS) ao ambiente virtual. Os dados foram coletados usando redes sociais e aplicativos de encontro voltados a H
BORDEAUX, France (AFP) — David is a psychologist and has been taking part in drug-fueled gay orgies for the past 15 years.
“The sex is insane — utterly unbridled — which of course is partly down to the drugs but also because you can act out all your fantasies,” said the 54-year-old, who has been in a relationship for two years.
Chemsex — taking drugs to enhance sexual pleasure and performance — “has opened a whole world of possibilities to me,” David added.
“Sex doesn’t have to be limited to two people... There is a whole fantasy and transgressive side to it that turns me on. It is like you are in a porn film.”
Agence France-Presse talked to several French gay men who regularly indulge in the “party and play” scene, mostly in the southwestern town of Bordeaux.
They described how their chemically-assisted group sex sessions sometimes last days, with sexual sensations and stamina boosted by psychoactive drugs they sniff, swallow and inject.
But the growing “high ‘n’ horny” subculture also comes with sizeable risks — some of them deadly.
Most meet online with the “wired play” s
Chemsex and chill parties: What really happens behind closed doors at three-day cocaine orgies
As I watched a masturbating NHS supervisor dispense syringes and crystal meth at a condom-free orgy, I wondered, how did we get here?
‘Here’ was a chemsex party, where men engage in sex high on a concoction of drugs, usually at private house parties that can last several days.
These parties have been a feature of the gay community for years but as the number of gatherings has grown, they have been thrust into the mainstream by Vice documentaries and BBC drama London Spy.
Chemsex is portrayed ‘unsafe’, with Boris Johnson backing calls from the Royal College of GPs for it to become a public health priority.
“This is a phenomenon we demand to take very seriously,” he said.
“We need to evaluate the strength of the problem and verb what steps we can take to minimise the risk of HIV spreading.”
I decided to find out for myself and went to a party wondering whether the issue had been blown out of all proportion.
I’m hardly one to preach having been to my fair disseminate of
The rise of chemsex: Once a niche of the gay scene, TRACEY COX reveals why straight women are indulging in drug-fuelled sex parties - despite extreme danger
Once a place where mainly gay men let loose, straight women and heterosexual are couples are now muscling in on the action of chemsex parties.
Taking part behind closed doors at an alarming rate across London, a chemsex party is one where drugs prefer MDMA, GHB, ketamine or methamphetamine are taken to lower inhibitions and enhance sex.
If it's a casual, impromptu invitation, you and like-minded friends will travel back to a intimate place, take drugs and then have sex with each other.
If it's a larger, organised event you'll find beds set up and condoms and lube provided when you come at the venue.
While attendees say it an direct to euphoric highs and incredible sex, experts verb issued warnings over the alarming scale of linked deaths.
According to figures seen by MailOnline, chemsex — particularly popular among gay men but also with some heterosexuals — is believed to be responsible for three deaths every month in London