British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Department of Medicine, University of British Columbia, St Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Addiction. 2022 Apr;117(4):986-997. doi: 10.1111/add.15717. Epub 2021 Dec 2.
In response to a dramatic rise in overdose deaths due to injection drug use, there was a rapid scale-up of low-threshold supervised injection services (SIS), termed 'overdose prevention sites' (OPS), in Vancouver, Canada in December 2016. We measured the potential impact of this intervention on SIS use and related health outcomes among people who inject drugs (PWID).
Segmented regression analyses of interrupted time series data from two community-recruited prospective cohorts of PWID from January 2015 to November 2018 were used to measure the impact of the OPS scale-up on changes in SIS use, public injection, syringe sharing and addiction treatment participation, controlling for pre-existing secular trends.
Vancouver, Canada.
Of 745 PWID, 292 (39.7%) were women, 441 (59.6%) self-reported white ancestry and the median age was 47 years (interquartile range = 38, 53) at baseline.
Immediate (i.e. step level) and gradual (i.e. slope) changes in the monthly proportion of participants who self-reported past 6-month SIS use, public injection, syringe sharing and participation in any form of addiction treatment.
Post OPS expansion, the monthly prevalence of SIS use immediately increased by an estimated 6.4% [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.7, 11.2] and subsequently further increased by an estimated 0.7% (95% CI = 0.3, 1.1) per month. The monthly prevalence of addiction treatment participation immediately increased by an estimated 4.5% (95% CI = 0.5, 8.5) following the OPS expansion, while public injection and syringe sharing were estimated to immediately decrease by 5.5% (95% CI = 0.9, 10.0) and 2.5% (95% CI = 0.5, 4.6), respectively. Findings were inconclusive as to whether or not an association was present between the intervention and subsequent gradual changes in public injection, syringe sharing and addiction treatment participation.
Scaling-up overdose prevention sites in Vancouver, Canada in December 2016 was associated with immediate and continued gradual increases in supervised injection service engagement and immediate increases in related health benefits.
为应对因注射吸毒导致的过量用药死亡人数的急剧上升,加拿大温哥华市于 2016 年 12 月迅速扩大了低门槛监督注射服务(SIS),称为“过量预防场所”(OPS)。我们评估了这一干预措施对注射吸毒者(PWID)使用 SIS 及相关健康结果的潜在影响。
使用两个社区招募的 PWID 前瞻性队列的时间序列数据的分段回归分析,以衡量 OPS 扩展对 SIS 使用、公共注射、共用注射器和参与成瘾治疗的变化的影响,同时控制先前存在的季节性趋势。
加拿大温哥华市。
745 名 PWID 中,292 名(39.7%)为女性,441 名(59.6%)自述为白人血统,基线时的中位年龄为 47 岁(四分位距=38,53)。
过去 6 个月内参与者自我报告的 SIS 使用、公共注射、共用注射器以及任何形式的成瘾治疗的每月比例的即时(即步长)和逐渐(即斜率)变化。
在 OPS 扩展后,SIS 使用的每月患病率立即增加了 6.4%(95%CI=1.7,11.2),随后每月进一步增加了 0.7%(95%CI=0.3,1.1)。成瘾治疗参与的每月患病率在 OPS 扩展后立即增加了 4.5%(95%CI=0.5,8.5),而公共注射和共用注射器的使用率估计立即下降了 5.5%(95%CI=0.9,10.0)和 2.5%(95%CI=0.5,4.6)。关于干预措施与公共注射、共用注射器和成瘾治疗参与率随后的逐渐变化之间是否存在关联,结果尚无定论。
2016 年 12 月,加拿大温哥华市扩大了过量预防场所的规模,这与监督注射服务的即时和持续逐渐增加以及相关健康益处的即时增加有关。