| Literature DB >> 31470864 |
Allison O'Rourke1, Rebecca Hamilton White2, Ju Nyeong Park2, Kayla Rodriguez3, Michael E Kilkenny4, Susan G Sherman2, Sean T Allen2.
Abstract
AIM: Safe consumption spaces (SCS) are indoor environments in which people can use drugs with trained personnel on site to provide overdose reversal and risk reduction services. SCS have been shown to reduce fatal overdoses, decrease public syringe disposal, and reduce public drug consumption. Existing SCS research in the USA has explored acceptability for the hypothetical use of SCS, but primarily among urban populations of people who inject drugs (PWID). Given the disproportionate impact of the opioid crisis in rural communities, this research examines hypothetical SCS acceptability among a rural sample of PWID in West Virginia.Entities:
Keywords: Harm reduction; PWID; People who inject drugs; Rural public health; Supervised consumption spaces; Supervised injection facilities
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31470864 PMCID: PMC6717345 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-019-0320-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Characteristics of a rural population of PWID by hypothetical usage of a safe consumption space (SCS)
| Characteristic | Overall ( | Likely SCS users ( | Unlikely SCS users ( | Chi-square/ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (mean, SD) | 35.8 (8.6) | 35.8 (8.3) | 35.6 (10.0) | .8536 |
| Male | 222 (59.5) | 173 (58.6) | 47 (63.5) | .4453 |
| White, non-Hispanic | 302 (83.4) | 243 (84.7) | 58 (79.5) | .2823 |
| Sexual minority | 64 (17.1) | 53 (18.0) | 11 (14.9) | .5287 |
| Currently in a relationship | 175 (47.3) | 140 (47.5) | 35 (47.3) | .9803 |
| High school graduate or equivalent | 266 (71.7) | 209 (70.9) | 56 (75.7) | .4091 |
| Consider self-homeless | 213 (57.1) | 171 (58.0) | 41 (55.4) | .6904 |
| Health insurance | 273 (73.2) | 217 (73.6) | 52 (70.3) | .5692 |
| Arrest* | 114 (30.6) | 95 (32.2) | 18 (24.3) | .1886 |
| Years of injection drug use (mean, SD) | 10.9 (9.2) | 11.3 (9.2) | 9.5 (9.3) | .1491 |
| Drugs injected* | ||||
| Heroin | 306 (82.0) | 244 (82.7) | 60 (81.1) | .7420 |
| Crystal methamphetamine | 265 (71.0) | 214 (72.5) | 49 (66.2) | .2822 |
| Fentanyl | 210 (56.3) | 168 (57.0) | 40 (54.1) | .6534 |
| Speedball | 141 (37.8) | 121 (41.0) | 18 (24.3) | .0081 |
| Cocaine | 132 (35.4) | 113 (38.3) | 19 (25.7) | .0427 |
| Buprenorphine or Suboxone | 111 (29.8) | 90 (30.5) | 20 (27.0) | .5583 |
| Pain killers | 81 (21.7) | 65 (22.0) | 14 (18.9) | .5592 |
| Prefer fentanyl in drugs* | 112 (30.1) | 96 (32.5) | 15 (20.3) | .0396 |
| Places received sterile syringes* | ||||
| Borrowed from a friend | 139 (37.3) | 102 (34.6) | 36 (48.7) | .0253 |
| Needle exchange program | 246 (66.0) | 200 (67.8) | 46 (62.2) | .3579 |
| Bought/received from another person | 132 (35.4) | 98 (33.2) | 32 (43.2) | .1066 |
| Any receptive injection equipment sharing* | 225 (60.3) | 177 (60.0) | 47 (63.5) | .5800 |
| Public drug use* | 175 (48.6) | 144 (50.7) | 29 (40.3) | .1139 |
| Experienced a drug overdose* | 163 (43.7) | 138 (46.8) | 24 (32.4) | .0262 |
| Witnessed a drug overdose* | 267 (74.3) | 231 (78.3) | 45 (60.8) | .0019 |
| Received naloxone* | 179 (48.3) | 151 (51.2) | 28 (37.8) | .0399 |
| Comfortable talking to doctor about drug use | 251 (68.0) | 208 (71.0) | 41 (55.4) | .0103 |
| Wanted drug treatment but unable to get into a program* | 134 (36.3) | 113 (38.4) | 21 (28.8) | .1246 |
| HIV test* | 194 (52.3) | 162 (54.9) | 32 (43.2) | .0722 |
| Hepatitis C test* | 193 (52.0) | 161 (54.6) | 32 (43.2) | .0809 |
*Reported based on last 6 months