Department of Preventive Medicine, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, 2001 N. Soto Street, Los Angeles, CA, 90032, USA.
Behavioral Health Research Division, RTI International, 2150 Shattuck Avenue, Suite 800, Berkeley, CA, 94704, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020 Apr 1;209:107885. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.107885. Epub 2020 Feb 5.
Injection drug initiation usually requires assistance by someone who already injects drugs. To develop interventions that prevent people from starting to inject drugs, it is imperative to understand why people who inject drugs (PWID) assist with injection initiation.
Injection initiation history and motives for initiating others were collected from 978 PWID in Los Angeles and San Francisco, CA, from 2016-17. This article documents motivations for providing injection initiation assistance and examines demographic, economic, and health-related factors associated with these motivations using multivariable logistic regression modeling.
Among the 405 PWID who ever facilitated injection initiation, motivations for initiating were: injury prevention (66%), skilled at injecting others (65%), to avoid being pestered (41%), in exchange for drugs/money (45%), and for food/shelter/transportation (15%). High frequency initiation (>5 lifetime injection initiations) was associated with all motivations except for being pestered. Initiation to prevent injury was associated with being female. Initiation due to pestering was associated with recycling income and sex work. Being skilled was associated with age and HIV status, while initiation for money or drugs was associated with age, race, education, social security income, and substance use treatment. Lastly, initiation for food, shelter, or transportation was associated with age, sexual orientation and education level.
Diverse factors were associated with reported motivations for assisting someone to initiate injection for the first time. Our analysis underscores the need for prevention strategies focused on improving economic and housing conditions along with implementing drug consumption rooms to disrupt the social processes of injection initiation.
注射毒品的初始阶段通常需要已经注射毒品的人的协助。为了制定预防人们开始注射毒品的干预措施,了解为什么注射毒品者(PWID)会协助他人进行注射初始阶段是至关重要的。
从 2016 年至 2017 年,在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶和旧金山的 978 名 PWID 中收集了注射初始阶段的历史和协助他人开始注射的动机。本文记录了提供注射初始阶段协助的动机,并使用多变量逻辑回归模型检查了与这些动机相关的人口统计学、经济和健康相关因素。
在 405 名曾经协助他人进行注射初始阶段的 PWID 中,协助他人进行注射的动机包括:预防伤害(66%)、擅长为他人注射(65%)、避免被纠缠(41%)、换取毒品/金钱(45%)和换取食物/住所/交通(15%)。高频率的协助(超过 5 次的注射初始阶段协助)与除了被纠缠之外的所有动机相关。为了预防伤害而进行的协助与女性有关。由于被纠缠而进行的协助与回收收入和性工作有关。熟练技能与年龄和 HIV 状况相关,而出于金钱或毒品的目的进行的协助与年龄、种族、教育程度、社会保障收入和物质使用治疗相关。最后,为了食物、住所或交通而进行的协助与年龄、性取向和教育程度有关。
多种因素与报告的协助他人首次注射的动机相关。我们的分析强调了需要制定预防策略,重点改善经济和住房条件,并实施毒品消费室以破坏注射初始阶段的社会过程。