Marmor M, Shore R E, Titus S, Chen X, Des Jarlais D C
Department of Environmental Medicine, Center for AIDS Research, New York University School of Medicine, New York City, USA.
J Urban Health. 2000 Sep;77(3):359-68. doi: 10.1007/BF02386746.
Objectives included (1) to develop methods for identifying injection drug users with accelerating injection habits so they might be referred to counseling and treatment and (2) to investigate behavioral correlates of accelerating injection habits, including syringe-exchange program utilization. Data on drug use, enrollment in methadone maintenance, and demographic variables were obtained from 328 subjects who were seronegative for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) who attended anywhere from 4 to 11 quarterly study visits for interview, HIV pretest counseling and risk reduction counseling, and blood donation for HIV antibody testing. Subjects were recalled 2 weeks after each study visit to receive their results and post-test counseling. We characterized subjects according to their patterns of drug injection as accelerating, decelerating, or stable, using intraindividual regression analyses and categorization rules, and by syringe-exchange use as consistent users, sporadic users, or nonusers. The present subjects included 52% with decelerating, 29% with stable, and 19% with accelerating rates of drug injection. There were 128 subjects (39%) who were categorized as consistent users of syringe-exchange programs, 84 (25%) were categorized as sporadic users, and 116 (35%) were categorized as nonusers. All syringe-exchange groups showed significantly decelerating drug injection. Rates of decline were significantly less, however, among consistent syringe-exchange users than sporadic or nonusers of syringe exchanges. Categorical analysis also showed significant differences among groups, with 30% of consistent syringe-exchange program users having accelerating rates of drug injection compared to 9% of nonusers and 17% of sporadic users. That consistent syringe-exchange users included a larger proportion of individuals whose drug habits were accelerating than did sporadic users or nonusers of syringe exchanges suggests a need for improved identification and counseling of such subjects by syringe-exchange program staff. The present statistical approaches may be of value in targeting such efforts. The ability of a syringe-exchange program to attract a disproportionate share of drug users with accelerating rates of drug injection underscores the importance of these programs to HIV prevention efforts.
(1)开发识别注射习惯加速的注射吸毒者的方法,以便将他们转介至咨询和治疗;(2)调查注射习惯加速的行为相关因素,包括注射器交换项目的使用情况。从328名人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)血清阴性的受试者那里获取了药物使用、美沙酮维持治疗登记情况以及人口统计学变量的数据,这些受试者参加了4至11次季度性研究访视,接受访谈、HIV检测前咨询和风险降低咨询,并进行HIV抗体检测的献血。每次研究访视后2周召回受试者以告知其检测结果并提供检测后咨询。我们使用个体内回归分析和分类规则,根据药物注射模式将受试者分为注射加速、注射减速或稳定三类,并根据注射器交换项目的使用情况将其分为持续使用者、偶尔使用者或非使用者。目前的受试者中,52%注射减速,29%稳定,19%注射加速。有128名受试者(39%)被归类为注射器交换项目的持续使用者,84名(25%)为偶尔使用者,116名(35%)为非使用者。所有注射器交换组的药物注射均显著减速。然而,持续使用注射器交换项目的使用者的下降速度明显低于偶尔使用者或非使用者。分类分析也显示出组间存在显著差异,30%的注射器交换项目持续使用者注射加速,相比之下,非使用者为9%,偶尔使用者为17%。与注射器交换项目的偶尔使用者或非使用者相比,持续使用者中药物习惯加速的个体比例更高,这表明注射器交换项目工作人员需要改进对此类受试者的识别和咨询。目前的统计方法可能有助于此类工作。注射器交换项目吸引了不成比例的注射加速吸毒者,这凸显了这些项目对HIV预防工作的重要性。