| Literature DB >> 25398417 |
Waimar Tun1, Meredith Sheehy, Dita Broz, Jerry Okal, Nicholas Muraguri, H Fisher Raymond, Helgar Musyoki, Andrea A Kim, Mercy Muthui, Scott Geibel.
Abstract
There is a dearth of evidence on injection drug use and associated HIV infections in Kenya. To generate population-based estimates of characteristics and HIV/STI prevalence among people who inject drugs (PWID) in Nairobi, a cross-sectional study was conducted with 269 PWID using respondent-driven sampling. PWID were predominantly male (92.5 %). An estimated 67.3 % engaged in at least one risky injection practice in a typical month. HIV prevalence was 18.7 % (95 % CI 12.3-26.7), while STI prevalence was lower [syphilis: 1.7 % (95 % CI 0.2-6.0); gonorrhea: 1.5 % (95 % CI 0.1-4.9); and Chlamydia: 4.2 % (95 % CI 1.2-7.8)]. HIV infection was associated with being female (aOR, 3.5; p = 0.048), having first injected drugs 5 or more years ago (aOR, 4.3; p = 0.002), and ever having practiced receptive syringe sharing (aOR, 6.2; p = 0.001). Comprehensive harm reduction programs tailored toward PWID and their sex partners must be fully implemented as part of Kenya's national HIV prevention strategy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25398417 PMCID: PMC4352193 DOI: 10.1007/s10461-014-0936-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Behav ISSN: 1090-7165
Fig. 1Network diagram of PWID recruitment chain referral in Nairobi, 2011 (N = 275), by HIV serostatus and lifetime sharing of needle or syringe. Larger shapes depict seed participants (n = 6); smaller shapes are recruited respondents (n = 269). Gray HIV-seronegative respondents (n = 212; 1 seeds). Black HIV-seropositive respondents (n = 57; 5 seeds). Square Ever receptive syringe sharing (n = 151; 4 seeds). Circle Never receptive syringe sharing (n = 118; 2 seeds)
Crude and RDS-weighted demographic characteristics of PWID in Nairobi, 2011 (N = 269)
| Variable | Crude % ( | Weighted % (95 % CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Age (median 31, IQR 27–37) | ||
| 18–24 | 10.0 (27) | 9.9 (5.2–15.6) |
| 25–29 | 26.0 (70) | 23.7 (17.0–30.0) |
| 30–34 | 27.9 (75) | 20.2 (22.1–38.9) |
| 35 years or older | 36.1 (97) | 36.2 (28.9–44.5) |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 92.2 (248) | 92.5 (86.4–97.5) |
| Female | 7.8 (21) | 7.5 (2.5–13.6) |
| Education | ||
| None/incomplete primary | 47.6 (128) | 51.2 (42.5–59.9) |
| Completed primary | 17.8 (48) | 17.2 (11.6–23.3) |
| Some secondary or higher | 34.6 (93) | 31.5 (24.0–39.4) |
| Current marital status | ||
| Single, never been married | 27.5 (74) | 24.4 (17.1–32.0) |
| Single, formerly married | 54.3 (146) | 58.6 (50.6–66.5) |
| Currently married | 18.2 (49) | 16.9 (11.3–23.9) |
| Kenyan | ||
| Kenyan | 98.5 (265) | 97.9 (94.9–100) |
| Non-Kenyan | 1.5 (4) | 2.1 (0–5.1) |
| Employment | ||
| No income/not employed | 4.46 (12) | 3.2 (1.4–5.9) |
| Skilled labor/sales/professional | 11.5 (31) | 11.4 (6.0–17.0) |
| Casual laborer/scavenger | 34.9 (94) | 31.4 (23.7–37.7) |
| Transport worker | 23.1 (62) | 22.3 (16.0–31.4) |
| Illegal activity/sex work | 17.1 (46) | 18.8 (12.1–26.6) |
| Other | 8.9 (24) | 12.8 (7.2–19.3) |
Crude and RDS-weighted behavioral and HIV prevalence variables of PWID in Nairobi, 2011 (N = 269)
| Variable | Crude % ( | Weighted % (95 % CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Median age at first drug use [IQR] | 18 [ | |
| Time since first illicit drug use | ||
| <10 years | 30.7 (82) | 30.6 (22.9–38.7) |
| 10–<20 years | 49.4 (132) | 53.2 (44.4–61.8) |
| 20 years or more | 19.9 (53) | 16.2 (11.1–22.1) |
| First illicit drug used | ||
| Marijuana | 62.1 (167) | 57.2 (48.5–66.9) |
| Heroin | 20.8 (56) | 22.5 (14.9–29.9) |
| Other | 17.1 (46) | 20.3 (14.9–29.9) |
| Median age at first injection [IQR] | 33 [ | |
| First illicit drug injected | ||
| White heroin | 84.4 (227) | 84.3 (79.2–89.9) |
| Brown heroin | 14.9 (40) | 15.5 (9.9–20.6) |
| Other | 0.7 (2) | 0.2 (0.1–0.5) |
| Time since first injection | ||
| ≤6 months | 35.4 (95) | 43.3 (33.6–53.9) |
| 7 months to <5 years | 40.3 (108) | 35.4 (26.9–44.5) |
| 5 years or more | 24.3 (65) | 21.3 (14.2–28.4) |
| Type of drug injected currently | ||
| White heroin | 97.0 (261) | 96.5 (93.2–99.0) |
| Other | 3.0 (8) | 3.5 (1.0–6.8) |
| Poly-drug, use in past 1 montha | ||
| Marijuana | 66.5 (179) | 64.5 (56.1–72.4) |
| Khat | 10.8 (29) | 14.8 (8.9–21.3) |
| Cocaine | 3.7 (10) | 5.7 (1.4–11.3) |
| Tranquilizers | 58.0 (156) | 50.1 (41.8–58.6) |
| Drug injection behaviors | ||
| Injection frequency in the past 1 month | ||
| Everyday | 79.8 (214) | 77.3 (70.6–84.8) |
| Less than everyday | 20.2 (54) | 22.7 (15.2–29.4) |
| Most common location where PWID inject | ||
| At base where drugs were boughtb | 67.7 (182) | 60.6 (52.3–67.5) |
| Home | 34.6 (93) | 24.9 (19.2–31.3) |
| Street or park | 32.3 (87) | 32.6 (25.5–39.9) |
| In dealer/peddler’s home | 9.7 (26) | 13.7 (8.6–19.3) |
| Any abandoned building | 8.2 (22) | 7.5 (3.8–11.3) |
| Injecting risk behaviors in the past 1 month | ||
| Receptive syringe sharingc | 47.0 (126) | 47.4 (38.8–55.9) |
| Used pre-filled needle/syringe | 29.1 (78) | 33.2 (25.4–41.3) |
| Front- or back-loaded needle/syringe | 46.0 (123) | 46.3 (38.1–55.0) |
| Shared water used to prepare drugs | 59.0 (158) | 57.1 (48.4–65.2) |
| Shared equipmentc | 58.2 (156) | 56.9 (48.7–64.6) |
| Drew drugs from common container | 38.1 (102) | 37.9 (29.7–46.7) |
| Lent needle/syringe | 52.6 (141) | 50.0 (41.6–57.9) |
| Risky Injection in the past 1 monthd | 71.6 (192) | 67.3 (58.9–75.6) |
| Lifetime injecting risk behaviors | ||
| Ever receptive syringe sharingc | 56.1 (151) | 53.8 (45.4–62.1) |
| Ever used pre-filled needle/syringe | 39.9 (107) | 41.8 (33.9–50.0) |
| Ever shared water used to prepare drugs | 61.7 (166) | 63.4 (55.4–70.6) |
| Ever shared equipmentd | 65.1 (175) | 64.4 (56.3–71.9) |
| Ever drew drugs from common container | 51.3 (138) | 48.6 (40.6–57.3) |
| Risky injection ever in lifetimee | 78.8 (212) | 80.0 (73.9–85.5) |
| Sexual behaviors | ||
| Sexually active in the past 1 month | 39.0 (105) | 40.7 (32.3–49.5) |
| Partner type in the past 1 month | ||
| No partner | 60.6 (163) | 59.0 (50.4–67.2) |
| Regularf | 28.3 (76) | 29.5 (21.7–38.0) |
| Casualf | 4.8 (13) | 5.4 (1.4–10.8) |
| Commercialf | 6.3 (17) | 6.1 (2.8–10.1) |
| Condom use in the past 1 month among sexually active PWID ( | ||
| Always | 17.1 (18) | 20.8 (8.5–36.1) |
| Sometimes/never | 82.9 (87) | 79.2 (63.9–91.5) |
| Multiple sex partners in past 12 months | ||
| None or 1 partner | 76.2 (205) | 77.0 (68.6–83.8) |
| More than one partner | 23.8 (64) | 23.0 (16.2–31.4) |
| Last female sex partner ever injected drugs (among sexually active male PWID) ( | ||
| Yes | 36.1 (31) | 36.3 (26.6–69.2) |
| No | 63.9 (55) | 63.7 (30.8–73.4) |
| Knows HIV status (from prior testing) | ||
| Yes | 80.0 (212) | 78.9 (72.7–85.8) |
| No | 20.0 (53) | 21.1 (14.2–27.3) |
| HIV prevalence (All) | 21.2 (57) | 18.7 (12.3–26.7) |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 19.4 (48) | 15.4 (10.5–23.2) |
| Female | 42.9 (9) | 60.7 (14.7–87.2) |
| Age | ||
| ≤34 years | 26.7 (46) | 22.1 (13.3–33.2) |
| 35 years or older | 11.3 (11) | 13.0 (4.8–23.3) |
| STI prevalence | ||
| Syphilis | 1.5 (4) | 1.7 (0.2–6.0) |
| Gonorrhea | 1.1 (3) | 1.5 (0.1–4.9) |
| Chlamydia | 3.4 (9) | 4.2 (1.2–7.8) |
aConcurrent drug use (injected or non-injected) with at least one other drug injected in the past 1 month
bA base is typically a public open outdoor space where PWID buy drugs. PWID may inject there as well
cReceptive syringe sharing refers to using a needle/syringe used by someone else
dSharing equipment includes sharing of dropper, water, bleach, and other cleaning agents
eRisky injection practices variable is a composite variable that includes using needles/syringe after someone else used, using a pre-filled needle/syringe, front- or back-loading injections, sharing of preparation water, sharing of other injections equipment, or drawing drugs from a common container
fRegular partner: Someone with whom the respondent had an ongoing or long-term intimate sexual relationship; it included live-in partners and spouses. Casual partner: A partner with whom the respondent did not have an ongoing or intimate sexual relationship, and includes one-time encounters. Commercial partner: A partner who the respondent paid for sex or paid the respondent for sex with money, goods or services
RDS-weighted bivariate and multivariate associations between demographic and selected variables and HIV infection among PWID, Nairobi, 2011 (N = 269)
| Variable | OR |
| aORa | 95 % CI |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | |||||
| Age | |||||
| ≤34 years | 1 | 1 | |||
| 35 years or older | 0.5 | 0.117 | 0.4 | 0.1–1.1 | 0.072 |
| Gender | |||||
| Male | 1 | 1 | |||
| Female | 8.7 | 0.003 | 3.5 | 1.0–12.2 | 0.048 |
| Education | |||||
| Primary or less | 1 | ||||
| Secondary or higher | 1.1 | 0.790 | |||
| Injection behaviors (lifetime) | |||||
| Time since first injection | |||||
| 0–4 years | 1 | 1 | |||
| 5 years or more | 4.6 | 0.001 | 4.3 | 1.7–10.9 | 0.002 |
| Risky injection ever in lifetimeb | 3.8 | 0.050 | |||
| Receptive syringe sharingc | 7.9 | <0.0001 | 6.2 | 2.2–17.6 | 0.001 |
| Used pre-filled needle/syringe | 5.1 | <0.0001 | |||
| Front- or back-loaded needle/syringe | |||||
| Shared water used to prepare drugs | 3.6 | 0.014 | |||
| Shared equipmentd | 3.9 | 0.006 | |||
| Drew drugs from common container | 1.8 | 0.203 | |||
| Injection behaviors (past 1 month) | |||||
| Risky injection in the past 1 monthb | 2.0 | 0.127 | |||
| Receptive syringe sharingc | 2.2 | 0.063 | |||
| Used pre-filled needle/syringe | 2.5 | 0.033 | |||
| Front- or back-loaded needle/syringe | 2.3 | 0.052 | |||
| Shared water used to prepare drugs | 2.6 | 0.025 | |||
| Shared equipmentd | 2.1 | 0.101 | |||
| Drew drugs from common container | 3.1 | 0.008 | |||
a Adjusted for all other variables in the model
b Risky injection practices include using needles/syringe after someone else used, using a pre-filled needle/syringe, front- or back-loading injections, sharing of preparation water, sharing of other injections equipment such as spoons or cookers, or drawing drugs from a common container
c Receptive syringe sharing refers to using a needle/syringe used by someone else
d Sharing equipment includes sharing of dropper, water, bleach, and other cleaning agents