Division of Infectious Diseases and Global Public Health, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA.
Centre for Urban Health Solutions, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2018 Dec 15;79(5):559-565. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000001858.
Efforts to prevent injection drug use (IDU) are increasingly focused on the role that people who inject drugs (PWID) play in the assistance with injection initiation. We studied the association between recent (ie, past 6 months) injection-related HIV risk behaviors and injection initiation assistance into IDU among PWID in the US-Mexico border region.
Preventing Injecting by Modifying Existing Responses (PRIMER) is a multicohort study assessing social and structural factors related to injection initiation assistance. This analysis included data collected since 2014 from 2 participating cohorts in San Diego and Tijuana.
Participants were 18 years and older and reported IDU within the month before study enrollment. Logistic regression analyses were conducted to assess the association between recent injection-related HIV risk behaviors (eg, distributive/receptive syringe sharing, dividing drugs in a syringe, and paraphernalia sharing) and recent injection initiation assistance.
Among 892 participants, 41 (4.6%) reported recently providing injection initiation assistance. In multivariable analysis adjusting for potential confounders, reporting a higher number of injection-related risk behaviors was associated with an increased odds of recently assisting others with injection initiation (adjusted odds ratio per risk behavior: 1.3; 95% confidence interval: 1.0 to 1.6, P = 0.04).
PWID who recently engaged in one or more injection-related HIV risk behavior were more likely to assist others in injection initiation. These results stress the syndemic of injection initiation and risk behaviors, which indicates that prevention of injection-related HIV risk behaviors might also reduce the incidence of injection initiation.
预防注射吸毒(IDU)的努力越来越关注注射吸毒者(PWID)在协助注射开始方面所扮演的角色。我们研究了美国-墨西哥边境地区 PWID 最近(即过去 6 个月)与注射相关的 HIV 风险行为与协助他人开始 IDU 之间的关联。
预防通过改变现有反应来注射(PRIMER)是一项多队列研究,评估与协助注射开始相关的社会和结构因素。这项分析包括自 2014 年以来从圣地亚哥和蒂华纳两个参与队列收集的数据。
参与者年龄在 18 岁及以上,并在研究入组前一个月内报告过 IDU。我们进行了 logistic 回归分析,以评估最近与注射相关的 HIV 风险行为(如共享分配/接受注射器、在注射器中分割药物和共用器具)与最近协助他人开始注射之间的关联。
在 892 名参与者中,有 41 人(4.6%)报告最近提供了注射起始协助。在调整了潜在混杂因素的多变量分析中,报告更多的与注射相关的风险行为与最近协助他人注射开始的几率增加相关(每一种风险行为的调整后优势比:1.3;95%置信区间:1.0 至 1.6,P = 0.04)。
最近参与一种或多种与注射相关的 HIV 风险行为的 PWID 更有可能协助他人开始注射。这些结果强调了注射起始和风险行为的综合征,这表明预防与注射相关的 HIV 风险行为也可能减少注射起始的发生率。