Book Chapter
Petrol Sniffing, The Brain, and Aboriginal Culture. Between Sorcery and Neuroscience
S Cairney, P Maruff
Consciousness and Cognition | Published : 2007
Abstract
Petrol (gasoline) fumes can be inhaled directly from a bag, a saturated rag, or a small container either through the nose or the mouth. Following inhalation, the toxic chemicals in petrol enter the bloodstream through the lungs and produce pleasurable effects by depressing the central nervous system (CNS). Petrol sniffing occurs most frequently among indigenous adolescents who are from low-income, isolated communities, probably because petrol is cheap and readily available, and there is restricted access to the other drugs of abuse that are favored by equivalent groups in the wider community. Aboriginal people from many of these communities continue to maintain a strong alignment with tradit..
View full abstract