Bluthenthal Ricky N, Wenger Lynn, Chu Daniel, Bourgois Philippe, Kral Alex H
Department of Preventive Medicine, Institute for Prevention Research, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, 2001 N. Soto Street, Los Angeles, CA, 90033, USA.
Behavioral and Urban Health Program, RTI International, 351 California St., San Francisco, CA 94104, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Jun 1;175:210-218. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.04.001. Epub 2017 Apr 19.
A robust literature documents generational trends in drug use. We examined the implications of changing national drug use patterns on drug injection histories of diverse people who inject drugs (PWID).
Drug use histories were collected from 776 active PWID in 2011-13. Using descriptive statistics, we examine drug use initiation by year and birth cohort (BC) differences in drug first injected. A multivariate linear regression model of time to injection initiation ([TTII] (year of first injection minus year of first illicit drug use) was developed to explore BC differences.
The first drug injected by BC changed in tandem with national drug use trends with heroin declining from 77% for the pre-1960's BC to 58% for the 1960's BC before increasing to 71% for the 1990's BC. Multivariate linear regression modeling found that shorter TTII was associated with the 1980's/1990's BC (-3.50 years; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]=-0.79, -6.21) as compared to the 1970's BC. Longer TTII was associated with being female (1.65 years; 95% CI=0.40, 2.90), African American (1.69 years; 95% CI=0.43, 2.95), any substance use treatment prior to injection (4.22 years; 95% CI=2.65, 5.79), and prior non-injection use of drug that was first injected (3.29 years; 95% CI=2.19, 4.40).
National drug trends appear to influence injection drug use patterns. The prescription opiate drug era is associated with shorter TTII. Culturally competent, demographically and generationally-targeted prevention strategies to combat transitions to drug injection are needed to prevent or shorten upstream increases in risky drug use practices on a national level.
大量文献记录了吸毒方面的代际趋势。我们研究了全国吸毒模式变化对不同吸毒者(PWID)注射吸毒史的影响。
2011 - 13年收集了776名活跃吸毒者的吸毒史。运用描述性统计方法,我们按年份和出生队列(BC)来研究吸毒起始情况以及首次注射毒品的差异。构建了一个注射起始时间([TTII],首次注射年份减去首次使用非法药物年份)的多元线性回归模型,以探究出生队列差异。
出生队列首次注射的毒品与全国吸毒趋势同步变化,海洛因从1960年前出生队列的77%降至1960年代出生队列的58%,之后又升至1990年代出生队列的71%。多元线性回归模型发现,与1970年代出生队列相比,1980年代/1990年代出生队列的注射起始时间较短(-3.50年;95%置信区间[CI]= -0.79,-6.21)。注射起始时间较长与女性(1.65年;95% CI = 0.40,2.90)、非裔美国人(1.69年;95% CI = 0.43,2.95)、注射前接受过任何物质使用治疗(4.22年;95% CI = 2.65,5.79)以及首次注射毒品前曾有过非注射吸毒行为(3.29年;95% CI = 2.19,4.40)有关。
全国吸毒趋势似乎会影响注射吸毒模式。处方阿片类药物时代与较短的注射起始时间相关。需要制定具有文化适应性、针对人口统计学和代际特征的预防策略来应对向注射吸毒的转变,以在全国范围内预防或缩短危险吸毒行为上游环节的增加。