Université de Montréal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM), 900 Rue Saint Denis, Montreal, QC, H2X 0A9, Canada.
Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, École de Santé Publique, Université de Montréal, 7101 Ave Parc, Montreal, QC, H3N 1X9, Canada.
Harm Reduct J. 2022 Apr 18;19(1):38. doi: 10.1186/s12954-022-00620-w.
People who use drugs (PWUD) are at high risk of experiencing indirect harms of measures implemented to curb the spread of COVID-19, given high reliance on services and social networks. This study aimed to document short-term changes in behaviours and health-related indicators among PWUD in Montreal, Canada following declaration of a provincial health emergency in Quebec.
We administered a structured rapid assessment questionnaire to members of an existing cohort of PWUD and individuals reporting past-year illicit drug use recruited via community services. Telephone and in-person interviews were conducted in May-June and September-December 2020. Participants were asked to report on events and changes since the start of the health emergency (March 13, 2020). Descriptive analyses were performed.
A total of 227 participants were included (77% male, median age = 46, 81% Caucasian). 83% and 41% reported past six-month illicit drug use and injection drug use, respectively. 70% of unstably housed participants reported increased difficulty finding shelter since the start of the health emergency. 48% of opioid agonist treatment recipients had discussed strategies to avoid treatment disruptions with providers; 22% had missed at least one dose. Many participants perceived increased difficulty accessing non-addiction health care services. Adverse changes were also noted in indicators pertaining to income, drug markets, drug use frequency, and exposure to violence; however, many participants reported no changes in these areas. Among persons reporting past six-month injection drug use, 79% tried to access needle-syringe programmes during the health emergency; 93% of those obtained services. 45% tried to access supervised injection sites, of whom 71% gained entry.
This snapshot suggests mixed impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on PWUD in Montreal in the months following declaration of a provincial health emergency. There were signals of increased exposure to high-risk environments as well as deteriorations in access to health services. Pandemic-related measures may have lasting impacts among vulnerable subgroups; continued monitoring is warranted.
由于高度依赖服务和社交网络,吸毒者(PWUD)在经历为遏制 COVID-19 传播而实施的措施的间接危害方面处于高风险之中。本研究旨在记录在魁北克省宣布省级卫生紧急状态后,加拿大蒙特利尔的吸毒者短期行为和与健康相关的指标变化。
我们对一个现有的吸毒者队列成员和通过社区服务报告过去一年使用非法药物的个人进行了一项结构快速评估问卷调查。2020 年 5 月至 6 月和 9 月至 12 月进行了电话和面对面访谈。参与者被要求报告自卫生紧急状态开始以来(2020 年 3 月 13 日)发生的事件和变化。进行了描述性分析。
共纳入 227 名参与者(77%为男性,中位年龄 46 岁,81%为白种人)。分别有 83%和 41%报告过去六个月有非法药物使用和注射药物使用。70%的无固定住所者报告自卫生紧急状态开始以来,寻找住所的难度增加。48%的阿片类药物激动剂治疗接受者曾与提供者讨论避免治疗中断的策略;22%至少错过了一剂。许多参与者表示,获得非成瘾性保健服务的难度增加。在收入、毒品市场、药物使用频率和接触暴力方面也观察到不良变化;然而,许多参与者报告在这些领域没有变化。在报告过去六个月有注射药物使用的人中,79%在卫生紧急期间试图访问针具交换计划;93%的人获得了服务。45%的人试图进入监督注射点,其中 71%的人进入。
本研究快照表明,在宣布省级卫生紧急状态后的几个月里,COVID-19 大流行对蒙特利尔的吸毒者产生了混合影响。有迹象表明,接触高风险环境的风险增加,以及获得卫生服务的情况恶化。与大流行相关的措施可能会对脆弱亚群产生持久影响;需要继续监测。