Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182-4162, USA; Centre for Gender and Sexual Health Equity, 1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6, Canada.
Centre for Gender and Sexual Health Equity, 1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC V6Z 1Y6, Canada.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2022 Aug 1;237:109506. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109506. Epub 2022 May 27.
Despite a high prevalence of substance use among women sex workers (SWs), rigorous social epidemiologic data on substance use treatment experiences among SWs remains limited. Given these gaps and the disproportionate burden of criminalization borne by Indigenous SWs, we evaluated (1) structural correlates of unsuccessful attempts to access substance use treatment; and (2) the interaction between policing and Indigenous ancestry on unsuccessful attempts to access treatment among SWs who use drugs.
Prospective data were from an open community-based cohort of women SWs (2010-2019) in Vancouver, Canada. Bivariate and multivariable logistic regression with generalized estimating equations(GEE) assessed correlates of unsuccessful attempts to access treatment. A multivariable GEE confounder model examined the interaction between Indigenous ancestry and policing on unsuccessful attempts to access treatment.
Amongst 645 SWs who used drugs, 32.1 % reported unsuccessful attempts to access substance use treatment during the 9.5-year study. In multivariable GEE analysis, unsuccessful substance use treatment access was associated with identifying as a sexual/gender minority (AOR: 1.90, 95 %CI:1.37-2.63), opioid use (AOR: 1.43, 95 %CI: 1.07-1.91), and exposure to homelessness (AOR: 1.72; 95 %CI:1.33-2.21), police harassment (AOR: 1.48, 95 %CI:1.03-2.13), workplace violence (AOR: 1.80, 95 %CI: 1.31-2.49) and intimate partner violence (AOR: 2.11, 95 %CI:1.50-2.97). In interaction analysis, Indigenous SWs who experienced police harassment faced the highest odds of unsuccessful attempts to access substance use treatment (AOR: 2.59, 95 %CI:1.65-4.05).
Findings suggest a need to scale-up culturally-safe, trauma-informed addictions, gender-based violence, and sex worker services, alongside dismantling of systemic racism across and beyond health and addictions services.
尽管女性性工作者(SWs)中有很高的物质使用流行率,但关于 SWs 物质使用治疗经验的严格社会流行病学数据仍然有限。鉴于这些差距以及原住民 SWs 承担的不成比例的刑事化负担,我们评估了:(1)无法获得物质使用治疗的结构相关性;(2)在使用毒品的 SWs 中,警务与原住民血统对无法获得治疗的尝试之间的相互作用。
前瞻性数据来自加拿大温哥华一个开放的社区为基础的女性性工作者队列(2010-2019 年)。使用广义估计方程(GEE)的双变量和多变量逻辑回归评估了无法获得治疗的相关性。一个多变量 GEE 混杂模型检验了原住民血统和警务对无法获得治疗的尝试之间的相互作用。
在 645 名使用毒品的 SWs 中,32.1%的人在 9.5 年的研究期间报告无法获得物质使用治疗。在多变量 GEE 分析中,无法获得物质使用治疗与被认定为性/性别少数群体(AOR:1.90,95%CI:1.37-2.63)、阿片类药物使用(AOR:1.43,95%CI:1.07-1.91)和暴露于无家可归(AOR:1.72;95%CI:1.33-2.21)、警察骚扰(AOR:1.48,95%CI:1.03-2.13)、工作场所暴力(AOR:1.80,95%CI:1.31-2.49)和亲密伴侣暴力(AOR:2.11,95%CI:1.50-2.97)有关。在交互分析中,经历警察骚扰的原住民 SWs 面临无法获得物质使用治疗的可能性最高(AOR:2.59,95%CI:1.65-4.05)。
研究结果表明,需要扩大文化安全、创伤知情的成瘾、基于性别的暴力和性工作者服务,同时在卫生和成瘾服务内外消除系统性种族主义。