Suppr超能文献

“重要的不是你知道什么,而是你认识谁”:社会资本在预测巴尔的摩市注射吸毒者样本中危险注射吸毒行为方面的作用。

"It's Not What You Know but Who You Know": Role of Social Capital in Predicting Risky Injection Drug Use Behavior in a Sample of People who Inject Drugs in Baltimore City.

作者信息

Kumar Pritika C, McNeely Jennifer, Latkin Carl A

机构信息

Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD.

出版信息

J Subst Use. 2016;21(6):620-626. doi: 10.3109/14659891.2015.1122098. Epub 2016 May 9.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Injection drug use is the third highest risk factor for HIV transmission. Injection drug users, marginalized population, continue to be at threat for several health problems, including HIV, Hepatitis B & C and drug overdose. The area of social capital and risk behaviors is understudied. The current study aims to prospectively assess the relationship between social capital and the risk behaviors associated with injection drug use.

METHODS

The sample of the present study is a subset of 130 drug users who reported injection drug use (IDU) at both baseline and first follow-up wave for assessing the relationship between social capital and needle sharing in the city of Baltimore, MD. Factor analysis, structural equation modeling and multivariate logistic regression were conducted to explore these relationships.

RESULTS

A single-factor model fit well with factor loadings ranging from .20 to .95. Social capital is shown to be significantly and inversely associated (p<.05) with 35% decreased odds of the risk of sharing needles with every unit increase in social capital (AOR: 0.65, 95% CI: 0.06, 0.84).

CONCLUSION

The result from this study can be used to inform and fill gaps in the field of harm reduction. The interplay between social support, social participation and norms of trust, reciprocity generated from the index's social network and its relationship with behavior of needle sharing demonstrates that these leverage points should be emphasized in future harm reduction interventions.

摘要

背景

注射吸毒是艾滋病病毒传播的第三大高危因素。注射吸毒者作为边缘化人群,仍然面临包括艾滋病病毒、乙型和丙型肝炎以及药物过量在内的多种健康问题的威胁。社会资本与风险行为领域的研究较少。本研究旨在前瞻性评估社会资本与注射吸毒相关风险行为之间的关系。

方法

本研究的样本是130名吸毒者的一个子集,这些吸毒者在基线和首次随访时均报告有注射吸毒行为,用于评估马里兰州巴尔的摩市社会资本与共用针头之间的关系。进行了因子分析、结构方程建模和多变量逻辑回归以探索这些关系。

结果

单因素模型拟合良好,因子载荷范围为0.20至0.95。社会资本与共用针头风险的几率呈显著负相关(p<0.05),社会资本每增加一个单位,共用针头风险的几率降低35%(调整后的比值比:0.65,95%置信区间:0.06,0.84)。

结论

本研究结果可用于为减少伤害领域提供信息并填补空白。社会支持、社会参与以及该指数社会网络产生的信任和互惠规范之间的相互作用及其与共用针头行为的关系表明,在未来的减少伤害干预措施中应强调这些杠杆点。

相似文献

引用本文的文献

本文引用的文献

10
Social capital and mental illness: a systematic review.社会资本与精神疾病:一项系统综述。
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2005 Aug;59(8):619-27. doi: 10.1136/jech.2004.029678.

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验