Reid Molly C, Schneider Kristin E, O'Rourke Allison, Conrad Maisie A, Hughes Pamela M, Walls Melissa L, Allen Sean T
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Department of Health, Behavior & Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Harm Reduct J. 2025 Jul 18;22(1):123. doi: 10.1186/s12954-025-01248-2.
Syringe services programs (SSPs) deliver harm reduction supplies and services to people who use drugs. Despite their well-established positive impact, few studies have focused on SSP operations in rural and Indigenous contexts. This research explores correlates of willingness to use an SSP among a sample of people living in a rural Northern Midwest American Indian reservation community in the United States.
Using data from a community health survey conducted in a Northern Midwest reservation community ( = 227), we examined self-reported willingness to use an SSP among Indigenous adults who reported having ever used drugs. We tested for associations between willingness to use an SSP and several covariates, including drug use behaviors, overdose experiences, and social network characteristics.
Nearly half (43%) of the sample reported a willingness to use an SSP. Among people who had recently used drugs, 56% were willing to use an SSP. Willingness to use an SSP was significantly ( < 0.05) associated with lifetime and recent injection drug use, recent methamphetamine use, having experienced or witnessed an overdose, having friends or family who use drugs, and younger age.
These data suggest there is an openness for harm reduction in a Northern Midwest Indigenous community. Given the importance of Indigenous identity and traditional spiritual values to Indigenous communities, harm reduction efforts should be anchored in local culture and context. Future work should examine how harm reduction can best be implemented and tailored to the needs of Indigenous communities.
注射器服务项目(SSP)为吸毒者提供减少伤害的用品和服务。尽管其积极影响已得到充分证实,但很少有研究关注农村和原住民背景下的SSP运作情况。本研究探讨了美国中西部北部一个印第安人保留地农村社区的居民样本中使用SSP的意愿的相关因素。
利用在中西部北部保留地社区进行的一项社区健康调查(n = 227)的数据,我们调查了报告曾使用过毒品的原住民成年人自我报告的使用SSP的意愿。我们测试了使用SSP的意愿与几个协变量之间的关联,包括吸毒行为、过量用药经历和社交网络特征。
近一半(43%)的样本表示愿意使用SSP。在最近使用过毒品的人群中,56%愿意使用SSP。使用SSP的意愿与终身和近期注射吸毒、近期使用甲基苯丙胺、经历或目睹过量用药、有吸毒的朋友或家人以及较年轻的年龄显著相关(P < 0.05)。
这些数据表明,中西部北部的一个原住民社区对减少伤害持开放态度。鉴于原住民身份和传统精神价值观对原住民社区的重要性,减少伤害的努力应扎根于当地文化和背景。未来的工作应研究如何以最佳方式实施减少伤害措施并使其适应原住民社区的需求。