Morris Meghan D, Evans Jennifer, Montgomery Martha, Yu Michelle, Briceno Alya, Page Kimberly, Hahn Judith A
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States of America.
Joint Medical Program and Program in Medical Education for the Urban Underserved, University of California San Francisco & University of California, Berkeley, San Francisco, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Oct 6;9(10):e109282. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0109282. eCollection 2014.
It is increasingly recognized that the risk for HIV and hepatitis C (HCV) transmission among people who inject drugs (PWID), such as syringe sharing, occurs in the context of relationships between (at least) two people. Evidence suggests that the risk associated with injection behavior varies with injection partner types.
We utilized longitudinal dyad-level data from a study of young PWID from San Francisco (2006 to 2013) to investigate the relationship-level factors influencing high-risk injecting within HCV-serodiscordant injection partners (i.e., individuals who injected together ≥5 times in the prior month). Utilizing data from 70 HCV-serodiscordant injection partnerships, we used generalized linear models to examine relationship-level predictors (i.e., partnership composition, partnership closeness, and partnership dynamics) of: (1) receptive syringe sharing (RSS); and (2) receptive cooker use (RCU), as reported by the HCV-negative injection partner.
As reported by the "at-risk" HCV-negative injection partner, receptive syringe sharing (RSS) and receptive cooker use (RCU) were 19% and 33% at enrollment, and 11% and 12% over all visits (total follow-up time 55 person-years) resulting in 13 new HCV-infections (incidence rate: 23.8/100 person-years). Person-level factors, injection partnership composition, and partnership dynamics were not significantly associated with either RSS or RCU. Instead, intimate injection partnerships (those who lived together and were also in a sexual relationship) were independently associated with a 5-times greater risk of both RSS and a 7-times greater risk of RCU when compared to injecting only partnerships.
Our findings suggest a positive, and amplified effect of relationship factors on injecting drug risk behaviors among young PWID injection partnerships. The majority of interventions to reduce injection drug use related harms focus on individual-based education to increase drug use knowledge. Our findings support the need to expand harm reduction strategies to relationship-based messaging and interventions.
人们越来越认识到,注射吸毒者(PWID)之间艾滋病毒和丙型肝炎(HCV)传播的风险,如共用注射器,是在(至少)两人之间的关系背景下发生的。有证据表明,与注射行为相关的风险因注射伙伴类型而异。
我们利用了一项对旧金山年轻注射吸毒者的研究(2006年至2013年)中的纵向二元水平数据,以调查影响丙型肝炎血清学不一致注射伙伴(即前一个月一起注射≥5次的个体)中高风险注射的关系层面因素。利用来自70对丙型肝炎血清学不一致注射伙伴关系的数据,我们使用广义线性模型来检验以下方面的关系层面预测因素(即伙伴关系构成、伙伴关系亲密度和伙伴关系动态):(1)接受性共用注射器(RSS);以及(2)接受性使用烹饪器具(RCU),这是由丙型肝炎阴性注射伙伴报告的。
据“有风险”的丙型肝炎阴性注射伙伴报告,接受性共用注射器(RSS)和接受性使用烹饪器具(RCU)在入组时分别为19%和33%,在所有随访中分别为11%和12%(总随访时间55人年),导致13例新的丙型肝炎感染(发病率:23.8/100人年)。个人层面因素、注射伙伴关系构成和伙伴关系动态与RSS或RCU均无显著关联。相反,亲密注射伙伴关系(那些住在一起且也是性关系的伙伴)与仅注射伙伴关系相比,接受性共用注射器的风险独立高出5倍,接受性使用烹饪器具的风险独立高出7倍。
我们的研究结果表明,关系因素对年轻注射吸毒者注射伙伴关系中的注射毒品风险行为有积极且放大的影响。大多数减少注射毒品使用相关危害的干预措施侧重于基于个体的教育,以增加毒品使用知识。我们的研究结果支持有必要将减少危害策略扩展到基于关系的信息传递和干预措施。