Unsafe injection practices in a cohort of injection drug users in Vancouver: could safer injecting rooms help?
- 21 August 2001
- journal article
- Vol. 165 (4) , 405-10
Abstract
In several European countries safer injecting rooms have reduced the public disorder and health-related problems of injection drug use. We explored factors associated with needle-sharing practices that could potentially be alleviated by the availability of safer injecting rooms in Canada. The Vancouver Injection Drug User Study is a prospective cohort study of injection drug users (IDUs) that began in 1996. The analyses reported here were restricted to the 776 participants who reported actively injecting drugs in the 6 months before the most recent follow-up visit, during the period January 1999 to October 2000. Needle sharing was defined as either borrowing or lending a used needle in the 6-month period before the interview. Overall, 214 (27.6%) of the participants reported sharing needles during the 6 months before follow-up; 106 (13.7%) injected drugs in public, and 581 (74.9%) reported injecting alone at least once. Variables independently associated with needle sharing in a multivariate analysis included difficulty getting sterile needles (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2.7, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.8-4.1), requiring help to inject drugs (adjusted OR 2.0, 95% CI 1.4-2.8), needle reuse (adjusted OR 1.8, 95% CI 1.3-2.6), frequent cocaine injection (adjusted OR 1.6, 95% CI 1.1-2.3) and frequent heroin injection (adjusted OR 1.5, 95% CI 1.04-2.1). Conversely, HIV-positive participants were less likely to share needles (adjusted OR 0.5, 95% CI 0.4-0.8), although 20.2% of the HIV-positive IDUs still reported sharing needles. Despite the availability of a large needle-exchange program and targeted law enforcement efforts in Vancouver, needle sharing remains an alarmingly common practice in our cohort. We identified a number of risk behaviours--difficulty getting sterile needles, needle sharing and reuse, injection of drugs in public and injecting alone (one of the main contributing causes of overdose)--that may be alleviated by the establishment of supervised safer injecting rooms.This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Incidence of hepatitis C virus infection among injection drug users during an outbreak of HIV infection.2001
- The effect of syringe exchange use on high-risk injection drug users: a cohort studyAIDS, 2000
- Risk factors among IDUs who give injections to or receive injections from other drug usersAddiction, 1999
- HIV incidence among injecting drug users in New York City syringe-exchange programmesThe Lancet, 1996
- Reduced risk of hepatitis B and hepatitis C among injection drug users in the Tacoma syringe exchange program.American Journal of Public Health, 1995
- Maintaining low HIV seroprevalence in populations of injecting drug usersPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1995
- Validity of intravenous drug abusers' self-reported changes in HIV high-risk drug use behaviorsDrug and Alcohol Dependence, 1995
- Drugs, Communities, and "Harm Reduction" in Germany: The New Relevance of "Public Health" Principles in Local ResponsesJournal of Public Health Policy, 1995
- Harm reduction--a framework for incorporating science into drug policy.American Journal of Public Health, 1995
- Syringe and Needle Exchange as HIV/AIDS Prevention for Injection Drug UsersJAMA, 1994