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Injection partnership characteristics and HCV status associations with syringe and equipment sharing among people who inject drugs

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posted on 2024-05-06, 17:10 authored by Mary Mackesy-AmitiMary Mackesy-Amiti, Basmattee BoodramBasmattee Boodram, Kimberly Page, Carl Latkin
BACKGROUND: Sharing of syringes is the leading transmission pathway for hepatitis C (HCV) infections. The extent to which HCV can spread among people who inject drugs (PWID) is largely dependent on syringe-sharing network factors. Our study aims to better understand partnership characteristics and syringe and equipment sharing with those partners, including measures of relationship closeness, sexual activity, and social support, as well as self and partner HCV status to better inform interventions for young urban and suburban PWID. METHODS: Data are from baseline interviews of a longitudinal network-based study of young (aged 18-30) PWID (egos) and their injection network members (alters) in metropolitan Chicago (n = 276). All participants completed a computer-assisted interviewer-administered questionnaire and an egocentric network survey on injection, sexual, and support networks. RESULTS: Correlates of syringe and ancillary equipment sharing were found to be similar. Sharing was more likely to occur in mixed-gender dyads. Participants were more likely to share syringes and equipment with injection partners who lived in the same household, who they saw every day, who they trusted, who they had an intimate relationship with that included condomless sex, and who provided personal support. PWID who had tested HCV negative within the past year were less likely to share syringes with an HCV positive partner compared to those who did not know their status. CONCLUSION: PWID regulate their syringe and other injection equipment sharing to some extent by sharing preferentially with injection partners with whom they have a close personal or intimate relationship, and whose HCV status they are more likely to know. Our findings underscore the need for risk interventions and HCV treatment strategies to consider the social context of syringe and equipment sharing within partnerships.

Funding

Contextual Risk Factors for Hepatitis C Among Young Persons Who inject Drugs | Funder: National Institutes of Health (National Institute on Drug Abuse) | Grant ID: R01DA043484

Computational modeling for HCV vaccine trial design and optimal vaccine-based combination interventions | Funder: Loyola University Chicago | Grant ID: R01AI158666

Computational Discovery of Effective Hepatitis C intervention Strategies | Funder: Loyola University Chicago | Grant ID: R01GM121600

History

Citation

Mackesy-Amiti, M. E., Boodram, B., Page, K.Latkin, C. (2023). Injection partnership characteristics and HCV status associations with syringe and equipment sharing among people who inject drugs. BMC Public Health, 23(1), 1191-. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-023-16133-5

Publisher

Springer Nature

Language

  • en

issn

1471-2458