Literature DB >> 21684142

Interest in low-threshold employment among people who inject illicit drugs: implications for street disorder.

Kora Debeck1, Evan Wood, Jiezhi Qi, Eric Fu, Doug McArthur, Julio Montaner, Thomas Kerr.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Income generation opportunities available to people who use illicit drugs have been associated with street disorder. Among a cohort of injection drug users (IDU) we sought to examine street-based income generation practices and willingness to forgo these sources of income if other low-threshold work opportunities were made available.
METHODS: Data were derived from a prospective community recruited cohort of IDU. We assessed the prevalence of engaging in disorderly street-based income generation activities, including sex work, drug dealing, panhandling, and recycling/salvaging/vending. Using multivariate logistic regressions based on Akaike information criterion and the best subset selection procedure, we identified factors associated with disorderly income generation activities, and assessed willingness to forgo these sources of income during the period of November 2008 to July 2009.
RESULTS: Among our sample of 874 IDU, 418 (48%) reported engaging in a disorderly income generation activity in the previous six months. In multivariate analyses, engaging in disorderly income generation activities was independently associated with high intensity stimulant use, as well as binge drug use, having encounters with police, being a victim of violence, sharing used syringes, and injecting in public areas. Among those engaged in disorderly income generation, 198 (47%) reported a willingness to forgo these income sources if given opportunities for low-threshold employment, with sex workers being most willing to engage in alternative employment.
CONCLUSION: Engagement in disorderly street-based income generation activities was associated with high intensity stimulant drug use and various markers of risk. We found that a high proportion of illicit drug users were willing to cease engagement in these activities if they had options for causal low-threshold employment. These findings indicate that there is a high demand for low-threshold employment that may offer important opportunities to reduce drug-related street disorder and associated harms.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21684142      PMCID: PMC3178688          DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2011.05.012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Drug Policy        ISSN: 0955-3959


  41 in total

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Review 5.  Structural interventions: concepts, challenges and opportunities for research.

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10.  Predictors of non-fatal overdose among a cohort of polysubstance-using injection drug users.

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  28 in total

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2.  Income level and drug related harm among people who use injection drugs in a Canadian setting.

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4.  Employment Cessation, Long Term Labour Market Engagement and HIV Infection Risk Among People Who Inject Drugs in an Urban Canadian Setting.

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5.  Application of space-time scan statistics to describe geographic and temporal clustering of visible drug activity.

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6.  The impact of engagement in street-based income generation activities on stimulant drug use cessation among people who inject drugs.

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7.  Informal recycling, income generation and risk: Health and social harms among people who use drugs.

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8.  Community-based participatory research in a heavily researched inner city neighbourhood: Perspectives of people who use drugs on their experiences as peer researchers.

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9.  Police confrontations among street-involved youth in a Canadian setting.

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10.  Income generation and attitudes towards addiction treatment among people who use illicit drugs in a Canadian setting.

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