Division of Community Health Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Apr 28;19(9):5351. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19095351.
People who inject drugs (PWID) are a population that disproportionately struggles with economic and mental health challenges. However, despite numerous reports of people globally experiencing new or exacerbated economic and/or mental health challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic, the literature on the effect of the pandemic on PWID and their risk for harm (e.g., overdose) remains sparse. The present study will describe reported changes during the pandemic in risk factors for drug overdose (including changes in mental health symptoms and care access) among PWID in Chicago, and it will examine associations between such risk factor changes and the experience of economic challenges during the pandemic. Participants from an ongoing longitudinal study of young PWID from the Chicago suburbs and their injection risk network members (N = 138; mean age = 28.7 years) were interviewed about changes in their experiences, substance use behavior, and mental health since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Bivariate cross tabulations were computed of each "overdose risk factor" with experiences of economic challenges during the pandemic. Fisher's Exact Tests were used to assess statistical significance. Adjusted logistic regression models were also conducted that controlled for sociodemographic characteristics, for time elapsed since the start of the pandemic, and for pre-pandemic income, homelessness, and injection frequency. Over half of our sample reported using alone more than usual during the pandemic, and over 40% reported using more than usual and/or buying drugs that were of a decreased purity or quality. Additionally, a large proportion of our sample (52.5% of those asked) reported more difficulty than usual accessing mental health care. Experiencing loss of a source of income during the pandemic was associated with using more drugs, using alone more, using a larger amount of drugs while using alone, wanting to stop using but being unable, and difficulty accessing mental health care. The preliminary associations found by the present study suggest that economic challenges or disruptions experienced during the pandemic are likely to increase risk for overdose among PWID experiencing such challenges, via changes in the above behaviors and/or conditions that are associated with risk for overdose. Intervention efforts should therefore be focused not only directly on overdose prevention, but also on assisting PWID with their economic challenges and helping them regain economic stability and access to services that may have been impeded by financial difficulty.
吸毒者(PWID)是一个面临经济和心理健康挑战的比例不成比例的群体。然而,尽管有许多报告称,在全球范围内,许多人在 COVID-19 大流行期间经历了新的或加剧的经济和/或心理健康挑战,但关于大流行对 PWID 及其伤害风险(例如,过量用药)的影响的文献仍然很少。本研究将描述在芝加哥的吸毒者中,与药物过量风险相关的因素(包括心理健康症状和护理获取方面的变化)在大流行期间的报告变化,并研究这些风险因素变化与大流行期间经济挑战经历之间的关联。这项研究来自对芝加哥郊区年轻吸毒者及其注射风险网络成员的一项正在进行的纵向研究(N=138;平均年龄为 28.7 岁),参与者接受了关于自大流行开始以来他们的经历、药物使用行为和心理健康变化的访谈。对每个“药物过量风险因素”与大流行期间的经济挑战经历进行双变量交叉表计算。使用 Fisher 精确检验评估统计学意义。还进行了调整后的逻辑回归模型,这些模型控制了社会人口统计学特征、大流行开始以来的时间流逝以及大流行前的收入、无家可归和注射频率。我们的样本中超过一半的人报告在大流行期间比平时更独自使用药物,超过 40%的人报告比平时更独自使用药物和/或购买纯度或质量下降的药物。此外,我们的样本中有很大一部分(要求的 52.5%)报告说比平时更难以获得心理健康护理。在大流行期间失去收入来源与使用更多药物、更独自使用药物、独自使用时使用更大剂量的药物、想要停止使用但无法停止以及难以获得心理健康护理有关。本研究初步发现的关联表明,PWID 在经历这些挑战时,大流行期间经历的经济挑战或中断可能会通过上述行为和/或与过量用药风险相关的条件的变化,增加过量用药的风险。因此,干预措施不仅应直接侧重于预防过量用药,还应帮助 PWID 应对经济挑战,并帮助他们恢复经济稳定和获得可能因经济困难而受阻的服务。