BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, 608-1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6Z 1Y6.
Int J Drug Policy. 2011 Sep;22(5):376-84. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2011.05.012. Epub 2011 Jun 17.
Income generation opportunities available to people who use illicit drugs have been associated with street disorder. Among a cohort of injection drug users (IDU) we sought to examine street-based income generation practices and willingness to forgo these sources of income if other low-threshold work opportunities were made available.
Data were derived from a prospective community recruited cohort of IDU. We assessed the prevalence of engaging in disorderly street-based income generation activities, including sex work, drug dealing, panhandling, and recycling/salvaging/vending. Using multivariate logistic regressions based on Akaike information criterion and the best subset selection procedure, we identified factors associated with disorderly income generation activities, and assessed willingness to forgo these sources of income during the period of November 2008 to July 2009.
Among our sample of 874 IDU, 418 (48%) reported engaging in a disorderly income generation activity in the previous six months. In multivariate analyses, engaging in disorderly income generation activities was independently associated with high intensity stimulant use, as well as binge drug use, having encounters with police, being a victim of violence, sharing used syringes, and injecting in public areas. Among those engaged in disorderly income generation, 198 (47%) reported a willingness to forgo these income sources if given opportunities for low-threshold employment, with sex workers being most willing to engage in alternative employment.
Engagement in disorderly street-based income generation activities was associated with high intensity stimulant drug use and various markers of risk. We found that a high proportion of illicit drug users were willing to cease engagement in these activities if they had options for causal low-threshold employment. These findings indicate that there is a high demand for low-threshold employment that may offer important opportunities to reduce drug-related street disorder and associated harms.
为使用非法药物的人提供的创收机会与街头混乱有关。在一组注射吸毒者(IDU)中,我们试图检查基于街头的创收实践,以及如果提供其他低门槛的工作机会,是否愿意放弃这些收入来源。
数据来自前瞻性社区招募的 IDU 队列。我们评估了从事混乱的基于街头的创收活动的流行率,包括性工作、毒品交易、乞讨和回收/废物利用/销售。使用基于 Akaike 信息准则和最佳子集选择过程的多变量逻辑回归,我们确定了与混乱的创收活动相关的因素,并评估了在 2008 年 11 月至 2009 年 7 月期间放弃这些收入来源的意愿。
在我们的 874 名 IDU 样本中,418 名(48%)报告在过去六个月中从事了混乱的创收活动。在多变量分析中,从事混乱的创收活动与高强度兴奋剂使用以及狂欢性药物使用、与警察的遭遇、成为暴力受害者、共用使用过的注射器以及在公共场所注射有关。在从事混乱的创收活动的人群中,有 198 人(47%)表示如果有机会从事低门槛的工作,愿意放弃这些收入来源,性工作者最愿意从事其他就业。
从事混乱的基于街头的创收活动与高强度兴奋剂药物使用和各种风险标志物有关。我们发现,如果有从事低门槛工作的选择,很大一部分非法药物使用者愿意停止从事这些活动。这些发现表明,对低门槛就业的需求很高,这可能为减少与毒品有关的街头混乱和相关危害提供重要机会。