Department of Health, Law, Policy & Management, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Health, Law, Policy & Management, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Am J Prev Med. 2021 Nov;61(5):738-749. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2021.04.017. Epub 2021 Jul 1.
Supervised injection facilities are harm reduction interventions that allow people who inject drugs to use previously obtained substances under the supervision of health professionals. Although currently considered illegal under U.S. federal law, several U.S. cities are considering implementing supervised injection facilities anyway as a response to the escalating overdose crisis. The objective of this review is to determine the effectiveness of supervised injection facilities, compared with that of control conditions, for harm reduction and community outcomes.
Studies were identified from 2 sources: a high-quality, broader review examining supervised injection facility-induced benefits and harms (from database inception to January 2014) and an updated search using the same search strategy (January 2014‒September 2019). Systematic review methods developed by the Guide to Community Preventive Services were used (screening and analysis, September 2019‒December 2020).
A total of 22 studies were included in this review: 16 focused on 1 supervised injection facility in Vancouver, Canada. Quantitative synthesis was not conducted given inconsistent outcome measurement across the studies. Supervised injection facilities in the included studies (n=number of studies per outcome category) were mostly associated with significant reductions in opioid overdose morbidity and mortality (n=5), significant improvements in injection behaviors and harm reduction (n=7), significant improvements in access to addiction treatment programs (n=7), and no increase or reductions in crime and public nuisance (n=7).
For people who inject drugs, supervised injection facilities may reduce the risk of overdose morbidity and mortality and improve access to care while not increasing crime or public nuisance to the surrounding community.
监督注射设施是一种减少伤害的干预措施,允许吸毒者在卫生专业人员的监督下使用以前获得的物质。尽管目前根据美国联邦法律被视为非法,但美国的几个城市仍在考虑实施监督注射设施,以应对不断升级的过量用药危机。本综述的目的是确定监督注射设施在减少伤害和社区结果方面与对照条件相比的有效性。
研究来自 2 个来源:一个高质量、更广泛的综述,检查监督注射设施引起的好处和危害(从数据库开始到 2014 年 1 月)和使用相同的搜索策略进行的更新搜索(2014 年 1 月至 2019 年 9 月)。使用社区预防服务指南制定的系统评价方法(筛选和分析,2019 年 9 月至 2020 年 12 月)。
本综述共纳入 22 项研究:16 项研究集中在加拿大温哥华的一个监督注射设施上。由于研究之间的结果衡量不一致,因此没有进行定量综合。纳入研究中的监督注射设施(每项研究的研究数量)主要与阿片类药物过量发病率和死亡率的显著降低(n=5)、注射行为和减少伤害的显著改善(n=7)、获得成瘾治疗计划的显著改善(n=7)以及犯罪和公共滋扰的增加或减少(n=7)相关。
对于吸毒者来说,监督注射设施可能会降低过量发病率和死亡率的风险,并改善获得护理的机会,同时不会增加犯罪或对周围社区的公共滋扰。