National Centre in HIV Social Research, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
AIDS Behav. 2013 Sep;17(7):2467-73. doi: 10.1007/s10461-012-0226-x.
This paper describes patterns of injecting drug use and blood borne virus (BBV)-related risk practices among Australian Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal people who inject drugs (PWID). A total of 588 participants, 120 of whom self-identified as Aboriginal completed a questionnaire. Aboriginal participants were more likely to have been in prison (37.6 vs. 16.5 %), to inject daily (72.7 vs. 55.0 %), to share ancillary equipment (64.9 vs. 44.8 %) and less likely to know about BBV transmission (72.0 vs. 87.7 %) and treatment (47.2 vs. 67.6 %). Aboriginal participants used services such as BBV testing and drug treatment at a comparable rate to non-Aboriginal participants. The findings suggest that Aboriginal PWID are at greater risk for acquiring BBV. The prison setting should be used to deliver health promotion information and risk reduction messages. More information is needed on Aboriginal people's access and use of services to ensure beneficial services are received in the most appropriate settings.
本文描述了澳大利亚原住民和非原住民注射吸毒者(PWID)的注射吸毒模式和与血源性病原体(BBV)相关的风险行为。共有 588 名参与者,其中 120 名自认为是原住民,完成了一份问卷。原住民参与者更有可能曾入狱(37.6% 比 16.5%)、每天注射(72.7% 比 55.0%)、共用辅助设备(64.9% 比 44.8%),并且不太了解 BBV 传播(72.0% 比 87.7%)和治疗(47.2% 比 67.6%)。原住民参与者使用 BBV 检测和药物治疗等服务的比例与非原住民参与者相当。研究结果表明,原住民 PWID 感染 BBV 的风险更高。应利用监狱环境向他们提供健康促进信息和减少风险的信息。需要更多了解原住民获取和使用服务的情况,以确保在最合适的环境中提供有益的服务。