| Literature DB >> 23304535 |
Roman Yorick1, Halyna Skipalska, Svetlana Suvorova, Olga Sukovatova, Konstantin Zakharov, Sara Hodgdon.
Abstract
Women who inject drugs require gender-specific approaches to drug rehabilitation, modification of risk behaviors, and psychosocial adaptation. Improved outcomes have been demonstrated when the specific needs of women's subpopulations have been addressed. Special services for women include prenatal care, child care, women-only programs, supplemental workshops on women-focused topics, mental health services, and comprehensive programs that include several of the above components. To address the special needs of women injecting drug user (IDU) subpopulations, such as HIV-positive pregnant women and women with young children, recently released female prisoners, and street-involved girls and young women, HealthRight International and its local partners in Russia and Ukraine have developed innovative service models. This paper presents each of these models and discusses their effectiveness and implementation challenges specific to local contexts in Russia and Ukraine.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23304535 PMCID: PMC3529453 DOI: 10.1155/2012/316871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Prev Med
Figure 1MAMA+ model.
Figure 2Case management protocol.
Figure 3Psychosocial adaptation of recent female prisoners.
Figure 4Comprehensive services for street-involved girls and young women.