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Associations Between Injection Risk and Community Disadvantage Among Suburban Injection Drug Users in Southwestern Connecticut,USA
Authors:Robert Heimer  Russell Barbour  Wilson R Palacios  Lisa G Nichols  Lauretta E Grau
Institution:1. Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases and the Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS, Yale University School of Public Health, 60 College St., New Haven, CT, 06510, USA
2. The Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS, Yale University School of Public Health, 135 College St., Suite 200, New Haven, CT, USA
3. Department of Criminology, College of Arts and Sciences, University of South Florida, 4202 E. Fowler Ave., Tampa, FL, 33620, USA
4. Department of Internal Medicine, Yale School of Medicine, 15 York St., New Haven, CT, 06510, USA
Abstract:Increases in drug abuse, injection, and opioid overdoses in suburban communities led us to study injectors residing in suburban communities in southwestern Connecticut, US. We sought to understand the influence of residence on risk and injection-associated diseases. Injectors were recruited by respondent-driven sampling and interviewed about sociodemographics, somatic and mental health, injection risk, and interactions with healthcare, harm reduction, substance abuse treatment, and criminal justice systems. HIV, hepatitis B and C (HBV and HCV) serological testing was also conducted. Our sample was consistent in geographic distribution and age to the general population and to the patterns of heroin-associated overdose deaths in the suburban towns. High rates of interaction with drug abuse treatment and criminal justice systems contrasted with scant use of harm reduction services. The only factors associated with both dependent variables—residence in less disadvantaged census tracts and more injection risk—were younger age and injecting in one’s own residence. This contrasts with the common association among urban injectors of injection-associated risk behaviors and residence in disadvantaged communities. Poor social support and moderate/severe depression were associated with risky injection practices (but not residence in specific classes of census tracts), suggesting that a region-wide dual diagnosis approach to the expansion of harm reduction services could be effective at reducing the negative consequences of injection drug use.
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