Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health, 3215 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19104, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health, 121 South Main Street, Box G-S-121-2, Providence, RI, 02912, USA.
Harm Reduct J. 2023 Feb 4;20(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s12954-023-00741-w.
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected structurally vulnerable populations including people who use drugs (PWUD). Increased overdose risk behaviors among PWUD during the pandemic have been documented, with research underscoring the role of influencing factors such as isolation and job loss in these behaviors. Here, we use qualitative methods to examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and pandemic-related response measures on drug use behaviors in a sample of PWUD in Rhode Island. Using a social-ecological framework, we highlight the nested, interactive levels of the pandemic's influence on increased overdose risk behaviors.
From July to October 2021, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 PWUD who self-reported any increase in behaviors associated with overdose risk (e.g., increased use, change in drug type and/or more solitary drug use) relative to before the pandemic. Thematic analysis was conducted using a codebook with salient themes identified from interview guides and those that emerged through close reading of transcribed interviews. Guided by a social-ecological framework, themes were grouped into individual, network, institutional, and policy-level influences of the pandemic on drug use behaviors.
Individual-level influences on increased overdose risk behaviors included self-reported anxiety and depression, isolation and loneliness, and boredom. Network-level influences included changes in local drug supply and changes in social network composition specific to housing. At the institutional level, drug use patterns were influenced by reduced access to harm reduction or treatment services. At the policy level, increased overdose risk behaviors were related to financial changes, job loss, and business closures. All participants identified factors influencing overdose risk behaviors that corresponded to several nested social-ecological levels.
Participants identified multi-level influences of the COVID-19 pandemic and pandemic-related response measures on their drug use behavior patterns and overdose risk. These findings suggest that effective harm reduction during large-scale crises, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, must address several levels of influence concurrently.
持续的 COVID-19 大流行对结构性弱势群体造成了不成比例的影响,包括吸毒者(PWUD)。在大流行期间,PWUD 中过度用药风险行为有所增加,研究强调了隔离和失业等影响因素在这些行为中的作用。在这里,我们使用定性方法来研究 COVID-19 大流行及其相关应对措施对罗得岛州一组 PWUD 药物使用行为的影响。我们使用社会生态框架,突出强调了大流行对增加过量风险行为的嵌套、交互影响层次。
在 2021 年 7 月至 10 月期间,对 18 名自我报告与大流行前相比,行为与过量风险相关的任何增加(例如使用增加、药物类型改变和/或更多单独使用药物)的 PWUD 进行了半结构式访谈。使用主题分析,通过对访谈指南和通过仔细阅读转录访谈出现的主题进行主题分析。在社会生态框架的指导下,将主题分为个人、网络、机构和政策层面大流行对药物使用行为的影响。
个体层面上增加过量风险行为的影响因素包括自我报告的焦虑和抑郁、孤立和孤独以及无聊。网络层面的影响因素包括当地毒品供应的变化和特定于住房的社交网络组成的变化。在机构层面,吸毒模式受到减少获得减少伤害或治疗服务的影响。在政策层面,增加过量风险行为与财务变化、失业和企业关闭有关。所有参与者都确定了影响过量风险行为的因素,这些因素对应几个嵌套的社会生态层次。
参与者确定了 COVID-19 大流行及其相关应对措施对他们的药物使用行为模式和过量风险的多层次影响。这些发现表明,在 COVID-19 等大规模危机期间,有效的减少伤害措施必须同时解决几个层面的影响。