Culbert Gabriel J, Waluyo Agung, Iriyanti Mariska, Muchransyah Azalia P, Kamarulzaman Adeeba, Altice Frederick L
Yale University School of Medicine, Section of Infectious Diseases, AIDS Program, New Haven, CT, USA; Universitas Indonesia, Faculty of Nursing, Center for HIV/AIDS Nursing Research, Depok, Indonesia; University of Malaya, Faculty of Medicine, Centre of Excellence for Research in AIDS (CERiA), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Universitas Indonesia, Faculty of Nursing, Center for HIV/AIDS Nursing Research, Depok, Indonesia.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2015 Apr 1;149:71-9. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.01.018. Epub 2015 Jan 25.
In Indonesia, incarceration of people who inject drugs (PWID) and access to drugs in prison potentiate within-prison drug injection (WP-DI), a preventable and extremely high-risk behavior that may contribute substantially to HIV transmission in prison and communities to which prisoners are released.
This mixed method study examined the prevalence, correlates, and social context of WP-DI among HIV-infected male prisoners in Indonesia.
102 randomly selected HIV-infected male prisoners completed semi-structured voice-recorded interviews about drug use changes after arrest, drug use cues within prison, and impact of WP-DI on HIV and addiction treatment. Logistic regression identified multivariate correlates of WP-DI and thematic analysis of interview transcripts used grounded-theory.
Over half (56%) of participants reported previous WP-DI. Of those, 93% shared injection equipment in prison, and 78.6% estimated sharing needles with ≥ 10 other prisoners. Multivariate analyses independently correlated WP-DI with being incarcerated for drug offenses (AOR = 3.29, 95%CI = 1.30-8.31, p = 0.011) and daily drug injection before arrest (AOR = 5.23, 95%CI = 1.42-19.25, p = 0.013). Drug availability and proximity to drug users while incarcerated were associated with frequent drug craving and escalating drug use risk behaviors after arrest. Energetic heroin marketing and stigmatizing attitudes toward methadone contribute to WP-DI and impede addiction and HIV treatment.
Frequent WP-DI and needle sharing among these HIV-infected Indonesian prison inmates indicate the need for structural interventions that reduce overcrowding, drug supply, and needle sharing, and improve detection and treatment of substance use disorders upon incarceration to minimize WP-DI and associated harm.
在印度尼西亚,注射吸毒者(PWID)被监禁以及在监狱中能够获取毒品助长了狱内毒品注射(WP-DI),这是一种可预防的极高风险行为,可能会极大地促使监狱内以及囚犯获释后进入的社区发生艾滋病毒传播。
这项混合方法研究调查了印度尼西亚感染艾滋病毒的男性囚犯中WP-DI的流行情况、相关因素及社会背景。
102名随机挑选的感染艾滋病毒的男性囚犯完成了半结构化的录音访谈,内容涉及被捕后吸毒情况的变化、监狱内的吸毒诱因以及WP-DI对艾滋病毒和成瘾治疗的影响。逻辑回归确定了WP-DI的多变量相关因素,对访谈记录进行主题分析时采用了扎根理论。
超过半数(56%)的参与者报告曾有过WP-DI。其中,93%在监狱中共享注射器具,78.6%估计与至少10名其他囚犯共用针头。多变量分析独立显示,WP-DI与因毒品犯罪被监禁(比值比[AOR]=3.29,95%置信区间[CI]=1.30-8.31,p=0.011)以及被捕前每日注射毒品(AOR=5.23,95%CI=1.42-19.25,p=0.013)相关。被监禁期间毒品的可获得性以及与吸毒者的接近程度与被捕后频繁的毒瘾渴望和不断升级的吸毒风险行为有关。活跃的海洛因市场推销以及对美沙酮的歧视态度助长了WP-DI,并阻碍了成瘾和艾滋病毒治疗。
这些感染艾滋病毒的印度尼西亚监狱囚犯中频繁的WP-DI和针头共享表明,需要采取结构性干预措施,以减少过度拥挤、毒品供应和针头共享,并改善监禁时物质使用障碍的检测和治疗,以尽量减少WP-DI及相关危害。