Des Jarlais Don C, Arasteh Kamyar, Barnes David M, Feelemyer Jonathan, Berg Hayley, Raag Mait, Talu Ave, Org Greete, Tross Susan, Uuskula Anneli
Department of Epidemiology, College of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, NY, United States.
Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia.
Front Sociol. 2021 Feb 15;6:619560. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2021.619560. eCollection 2021.
Injecting drugs for the first time almost always requires assistance from an experienced person who injects drugs (PWID). While there has been moderate amount of research on PWID who assist with first injections, most of this research has focused on identifying characteristics of PWID who assist with first injections. We do not have a formal model that describes how the minority of PWID come to assist do so, while the majority never assist. Through comparison of persons who did or did not recently assist with first injections using data from PWID in Tallinn, Estonia (N = 286) and Staten Island, New York City (N = 101), we developed a formal multi-stage model of how PWID come to assist with first injections. The model had a primary pathway 1) of engaging in "injection promoting" behaviors, 2) being asked to assist, and 3) assisting. Statistical testing using odds ratios showed participation in each stage was strongly associated with participation in the next stage (all odds ratios >3.0) and the probabilities of assisting significantly increased with participation in the successive stages. We then used the model to compare engagement in the stages pre-vs. post participation in an intervention, and to compare persons who recently assisted to persons who had assisted in the past but had not recently assisted and to persons who had never assisted. Advantages of a formal model for how current PWID come to assist with first injections include: facilitating comparisons across different PWID populations and assessing strengths and limitations of interventions to reduce assisting with first injections.
首次注射毒品几乎总是需要有经验的注射吸毒者(PWID)提供帮助。虽然针对协助首次注射的注射吸毒者已有一定数量的研究,但大部分此类研究都集中在确定协助首次注射的注射吸毒者的特征上。我们没有一个正式的模型来描述少数注射吸毒者是如何开始提供协助的,而大多数人从未提供过协助。通过比较爱沙尼亚塔林(N = 286)和美国纽约市斯塔滕岛(N = 101)的注射吸毒者数据中近期是否协助过首次注射的人员,我们开发了一个关于注射吸毒者如何协助首次注射的正式多阶段模型。该模型有一条主要路径:1)参与“促进注射”行为,2)被请求提供协助,3)提供协助。使用比值比进行的统计检验表明,参与每个阶段都与参与下一阶段密切相关(所有比值比>3.0),并且随着参与后续阶段,提供协助的概率显著增加。然后,我们使用该模型比较干预前后各阶段的参与情况,并比较近期提供过协助的人员与过去提供过协助但近期未提供协助的人员以及从未提供过协助的人员。关于当前注射吸毒者如何协助首次注射的正式模型的优点包括:便于在不同的注射吸毒者群体之间进行比较,以及评估减少协助首次注射的干预措施的优势和局限性。