| Literature DB >> 26733043 |
Kora DeBeck1,2, Thomas Kerr3,4, Seonaid Nolan5,6, Huiru Dong7, Julio Montaner8,9, Evan Wood10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preventing injection drug use among vulnerable youth is critical for reducing serious drug-related harms. Addiction treatment is one evidence-based intervention to decrease problematic substance use; however, youth frequently report being unable to access treatment services and the impact of this on drug use trajectories remains largely unexplored. This study examines the relationship between being unable to access addiction treatment and injection initiation among street-involved youth.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26733043 PMCID: PMC4702392 DOI: 10.1186/s13011-015-0046-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy ISSN: 1747-597X
Baseline characteristics and Cox regression analysis for factors associated with injection initiation among street-involved youth (n = 462)
| Characteristic | Baseline Characteristics | Bivariable and Multivariable Cox Regression Analysis | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Injection Initiation | Unadjusted HRa |
| Adjusted HR (95 % CI) |
| ||
| Yes ( | No ( | (95 % CI)b | ||||
| Unable to access addiction treatment d,e | ||||||
| Yes | 15 (15.5) | 33 (9.0) | 2.19 (1.27–3.78) | 0.005 | 2.02 (1.12–3.62) | 0.019 |
| No | 80 (82.5) | 324 (88.8) | ||||
| Years since initiated hard drug use (HR per additional year) | ||||||
| Median | 5.4 | 5.4 | 1.00 (0.94–1.07) | 0.893 | 0.99 (0.92–1.06) | 0.714 |
| IQR | (3.7–7.8) | (3.1–7.9) | ||||
| Caucasian Ethnicity | ||||||
| Yes | 68 (70.1) | 219 (60.0) | 1.50 (0.97–2.31) | 0.069 | 1.40 (0.88–2.21) | 0.152 |
| No | 29 (29.9) | 146 (40.0) | ||||
| Female Gender | ||||||
| Yes | 28 (28.9) | 114 (31.2) | 0.96 (0.62–1.50) | 0.872 | 1.06 (0.68–1.65) | 0.805 |
| No | 69 (71.1) | 251 (68.8) | ||||
| Heroin Usec,d,e | ||||||
| Yes | 24 (24.7) | 52 (14.2) | 2.12 (1.34–3.36) | 0.001 | 1.48 (0.86–2.55) | 0.157 |
| No | 70 (72.2) | 307 (84.1) | ||||
| Cocaine Usec,d,e | ||||||
| Yes | 43 (44.3) | 186 (51.0) | 1.17 (0.77–1.78) | 0.449 | 1.06 (0.69–1.64) | 0.782 |
| No | 52 (53.6) | 176 (48.2) | ||||
| Crack Smokingd,e | ||||||
| Yes | 68 (70.1) | 190 (52.1) | 1.71 (1.11–2.63) | 0.015 | 1.23 (0.76–1.97) | 0.402 |
| No | 27 (27.8) | 171 (46.8) | ||||
| Crystal Meth Usec,d,e | ||||||
| Yes | 51 (52.6) | 122 (33.4) | 2.31 (1.53–3.47) | <0.001 | 2.00 (1.32–3.04) | 0.001 |
| No | 43 (44.3) | 238 (65.2) | ||||
Not all cells add up to 462 as participants may choose not to answer sensitive questions
a HR hazard ratio; b CI confidence interval
cdenotes non-injection use; ddenotes activities in the 6 months prior to follow-up interview; erefers to the activities lagged to the pervious available study follow-up; f p-values based on Wald test