Newland Jamee, Newman Christy, Treloar Carla
Centre of Social Research in Health, UNSW Australia, John Goodsell Building, UNSW 2052, Australia.
Centre of Social Research in Health, UNSW Australia, John Goodsell Building, UNSW 2052, Australia.
Int J Drug Policy. 2016 Aug;34:65-71. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2016.04.005. Epub 2016 Apr 23.
In Australia, sterile needles and syringes are distributed to people who inject drugs (PWID) through formal services for the purposes of preventing blood borne viruses (BBV). Peer distribution involves people acquiring needles from formal services and redistributing them to others. This paper investigates the dynamics of the distribution of sterile injecting equipment among networks of people who inject drugs in four sites in New South Wales (NSW), Australia.
Qualitative data exploring the practice of peer distribution were collected through in-depth, semi-structured interviews and participatory social network mapping. These interviews explored injecting equipment demand, access to services, relationship pathways through which peer distribution occurred, an estimate of the size of the different peer distribution roles and participants' understanding of the illegality of peer distribution in NSW.
Data were collected from 32 participants, and 31 (98%) reported participating in peer distribution in the months prior to interview. Of those 31 participants, five reported large-scale formal distribution, with an estimated volume of 34,970 needles and syringes annually. Twenty-two participated in reciprocal exchange, where equipment was distributed and received on an informal basis that appeared dependent on context and circumstance and four participants reported recipient peer distribution as their only access to sterile injecting equipment. Most (n=27) were unaware that it was illegal to distribute injecting equipment to their peers.
Peer distribution was almost ubiquitous amongst the PWID participating in the study, and although five participants reported taking part in the highly organised, large-scale distribution of injecting equipment for altruistic reasons, peer distribution was more commonly reported to take place in small networks of friends and/or partners for reasons of convenience. The law regarding the illegality of peer distribution needs to change so that NSPs can capitalise on peer distribution to increase the options available to PWID and to acknowledge PWID as essential harm reduction agents in the prevention of BBVs.
在澳大利亚,为预防血源性病毒(BBV),通过正规服务向注射毒品者(PWID)分发无菌针头和注射器。同伴分发是指人们从正规服务机构获取针头,再分发给其他人。本文调查了澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)四个地点注射毒品者网络中无菌注射设备的分发动态。
通过深入的半结构化访谈和参与式社会网络映射收集探索同伴分发行为的定性数据。这些访谈探讨了注射设备需求、服务获取情况、同伴分发发生的关系路径、对不同同伴分发角色规模的估计以及参与者对新南威尔士州同伴分发非法性的理解。
从32名参与者收集了数据,31名(98%)报告在访谈前几个月参与了同伴分发。在这31名参与者中,5名报告进行大规模正规分发,估计每年分发34970个针头和注射器。22名参与了互惠交换,即设备在非正式基础上分发和接收,这似乎取决于具体情况和环境,4名参与者报告接受同伴分发是他们获取无菌注射设备的唯一途径。大多数人(n = 27)不知道向同伴分发注射设备是非法的。
在参与研究的注射毒品者中,同伴分发几乎无处不在,尽管有5名参与者报告出于利他原因参与了高度组织化的大规模注射设备分发,但同伴分发更常见于朋友和/或伙伴的小网络中,原因是方便。关于同伴分发非法性的法律需要改变,以便针头和注射器项目(NSPs)能够利用同伴分发来增加注射毒品者可获得的选择,并认可注射毒品者是预防血源性病毒的重要减少伤害推动者。