| Literature DB >> 17551825 |
Micaela H Coady1, Mary H Latka, Hanne Thiede, Elizabeth T Golub, Larry Ouellet, Sharon M Hudson, Farzana Kapadia, Richard S Garfein.
Abstract
Using cross-sectional analysis we examined residential status and associated differences in HIV risk behaviors among 3266 young IDUs enrolled in an HIV prevention trial. A three-level outcome (homeless (37%), equivocally housed (17%), housed (46%)) was defined based on responses to two questions assessing subjective and objective criteria for homelessness: "equivocally housed" participants were discordant on these measures. In multivariate analysis, antecedents of homelessness were having lived in an out-of-home placement, been thrown out of the home or in juvenile detention, and experienced childhood abuse; while correlates included receiving income from other and illegal sources, drinking alcohol or using methamphetamine at least daily, using shooting galleries, backloading, and sex work. A subset of these variables was associated with being equivocally housed. HIV risk varies by housing status, with homeless IDUs at highest risk. Programs for IDUs should utilize a more specific definition of residential status to target IDUs needing intervention.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17551825 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-007-9248-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165