University of Queensland, Institute for Social Science Research, 80 Meiers Road, Indooroopilly, QLD 4068, Australia.
Burnet Institute, 85 Commercial Rd, Melbourne, VIC, 3004, Australia.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2018 Sep 1;190:188-194. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2018.06.009. Epub 2018 Jul 19.
Previous research has shown that people who inject drugs (PWID) experience discrimination on a regular basis. This study explores the relationships between discrimination against PWID and health and wellbeing.
Data on discrimination against PWID and their health and wellbeing were drawn from the Illicit Drug Reporting System collected in Australia in 2016. The Personal Wellbeing Index was used to measure wellbeing, and the Kessler-10 scale was used to measure psychological distress. Experience of overdose, injecting related illnesses, diseases, and risky injecting behaviour were also assessed. We fitted multivariate logistic regression models adjusted for socio-demographic, imprisonment history, and drug-related factors.
Of the 796 participants included in the study, the majority who reported experiencing discrimination were male (65%), heterosexual (89%), and unemployed (89%). Thirty percent of the sample (n = 238) reported they had never experienced discrimination because of their injecting drug use. Seventeen percent of participants had not experienced discrimination in the twelve months prior to the interview, 24% experienced discrimination monthly, 16% experienced discrimination weekly, and 13% experienced discrimination daily or more. Frequent discrimination was associated with increased odds of overdosing, injecting related illnesses and diseases, mental health issues, and poor wellbeing. Among those who reported experiencing discrimination, females and those who identified as Indigenous were found to have poorer health and wellbeing outcomes.
Our findings highlighted that frequent discrimination may lead to worse health and wellbeing among PWID. If our findings are supported by other research, policies aimed at reducing discrimination against PWID may be warranted or improved.
既往研究显示,注射吸毒者(PWID)经常遭受歧视。本研究旨在探讨 PWID 所遭受的歧视与健康和幸福感之间的关系。
本研究的数据来源于 2016 年澳大利亚非法药物报告系统,用于评估 PWID 所遭受的歧视与其健康和幸福感之间的关系。幸福感采用个人幸福感指数进行评估,心理困扰采用 Kessler-10 量表进行评估,同时评估了药物过量、与注射相关的疾病和风险注射行为。我们采用多元逻辑回归模型,对社会人口学特征、监禁史和药物相关因素进行了调整。
在纳入研究的 796 名参与者中,大多数报告遭受歧视的人是男性(65%)、异性恋(89%)和失业(89%)。30%的样本(n=238)表示他们从未因注射吸毒而遭受歧视。17%的参与者在访谈前 12 个月内没有受到歧视,24%的参与者每月受到歧视,16%的参与者每周受到歧视,13%的参与者每天或更频繁地受到歧视。频繁的歧视与药物过量、与注射相关的疾病和感染、心理健康问题和较差的幸福感相关。在报告遭受歧视的人群中,女性和原住民的健康和幸福感状况较差。
本研究结果强调,频繁的歧视可能导致 PWID 的健康和幸福感下降。如果本研究结果得到其他研究的支持,那么针对减少对 PWID 歧视的政策可能是合理的,或需要进一步改进。