Centre for Drug Policy and Evaluation, Unity Health Toronto, 209 Victoria St, Toronto, ON M5B 1T8, Canada; Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, 55 College St Room 500, Toronto, ON M5T 3M7, Canada.
Biostatistics Research Center, Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020 Jul 1;212:107983. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.107983. Epub 2020 Apr 29.
Given the prevalence and harms of incarceration among persons who inject drugs (PWID) and their role in injection drug use initiation, we aimed to investigate whether recent incarceration influences the likelihood PWID assist others in their first-ever injection.
Prospective cohort study of PWID in Vancouver, Canada who had their PReventing Injecting by Modifying Existing Responses (PRIMER) baseline visit between December 2014 and May 2017, reported never providing injection initiation assistance previously, and had ≥1 follow-up visit. The primary outcome, provision of injection initiation assistance, was defined via self-report as helping anybody inject for the first time in the past six months. The primary exposure was recent incarceration, i.e., self-report of being jailed, imprisoned or detained in the past six months. Participants were assessed biannually until November 2017, drop-out, or their first report of the primary outcome.
1,199 PWID (62.1% male; mean (SD) age, 44.4 (12.3) years) were included in our study. Across 4,171 follow-up visits, 67 participants (5.6%) reported providing injection initiation assistance. The proportion of participants reporting recent incarceration varied between 2.4% to 5.1% per follow-up visit. Based on a multivariable discrete-time proportional hazards regression analysis, recent incarceration was associated with an increased risk of providing injection initiation assistance during the same six-month period (adjusted hazard ratio, 2.64; 95% CI, 1.19 to 5.86).
The observed association between recent incarceration and risk of providing injection initiation assistance suggests that incarceration could be contributing to the expansion of injection drug use practices within vulnerable populations over time.
鉴于在注射毒品者(PWID)中监禁的普遍性和危害,以及他们在注射毒品使用起始中的作用,我们旨在调查最近的监禁是否会影响 PWID 帮助他人首次注射的可能性。
这是一项对加拿大温哥华的 PWID 进行的前瞻性队列研究,这些参与者在 2014 年 12 月至 2017 年 5 月期间进行了 PReventing Injecting by Modifying Existing Responses (PRIMER) 基线访问,报告以前从未提供过注射起始协助,并且至少有 1 次随访访问。主要结局是提供注射起始协助,通过自我报告定义为在过去 6 个月内帮助任何人首次注射。主要暴露因素是最近的监禁,即报告在过去 6 个月内被监禁、监禁或拘留。参与者每两个月评估一次,直到 2017 年 11 月,或他们首次报告主要结局,或退出研究。
我们的研究纳入了 1199 名 PWID(62.1%为男性;平均(SD)年龄为 44.4(12.3)岁)。在 4171 次随访访问中,有 67 名参与者(5.6%)报告提供了注射起始协助。每一次随访中报告最近监禁的参与者比例在 2.4%至 5.1%之间变化。基于多变量离散时间比例风险回归分析,最近的监禁与在同一 6 个月内提供注射起始协助的风险增加相关(调整后的危险比,2.64;95%CI,1.19 至 5.86)。
观察到的最近监禁与提供注射起始协助风险之间的关联表明,监禁可能随着时间的推移,导致易受感染人群中注射毒品使用实践的扩大。