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Peer-education Intervention to Reduce Injection Risk Behaviors Benefits High-Risk Young Injection Drug Users: A Latent Transition Analysis of the CIDUS 3/DUIT Study

journal contribution
posted on 2013-11-15, 00:00 authored by Mary E. Mackesy-Amiti, Lorna Finnegan, Lawrence J. Ouellet, Elizabeth T. Golub, Holly Hagan, Sharon M. Hudson, Mary H. Latka, Richard S. Garfein
We analyzed data from a large randomized HIV/HCV prevention intervention trial with young injection drug users (IDUs) conducted in five U.S. cities. The trial compared a peer education intervention (PEI) with a time-matched, attention control group. Applying categorical latent variable analysis (mixture modeling) to baseline injection risk behavior data, we identified four distinct classes of injection-related HIV/HCV risk: low risk, non-syringe equipment-sharing, moderate-risk syringe-sharing, and high-risk syringe-sharing. The trial participation rate did not vary across classes. We conducted a latent transition analysis using trial baseline and 6-month follow-up data, to test the effect of the intervention on transitions to the low-risk class at follow-up. Adjusting for gender, age, and race/ethnicity, a significant intervention effect was found only for the high-risk class. Young IDU who exhibited high-risk behavior at baseline were 90% more likely to be in the low-risk class at follow-up after the PEI intervention, compared to the control group.

Funding

This study was supported by a grant from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, R01 DA031584.

History

Publisher Statement

Post print version of article may differ from published version. The final publication is available at springerlink.com; DOI:10.1007/s10461-012-0373-0

Citation

Mackesy-Amiti ME, Finnegan L, Ouellet LJ, Golub ET, Hagan H, Hudson SM, Latka MH, Garfein RS. Peer-Education Intervention to Reduce Injection Risk Behaviors Benefits High-Risk Young Injection Drug Users: A Latent Transition Analysis of the CIDUS 3/DUIT Study. AIDS and Behavior . 2012 Nov 11. doi: 10.1007/s10461-012-0373-0

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Language

  • en_US

issn

1573-3254

Issue date

2013-07-01

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