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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2011 Jul 1.
Published in final edited form as: AIDS Behav. 2011 Jul;15(5):1003–1010. doi: 10.1007/s10461-010-9816-7

Table 1.

Descriptive statistics of study sample (n = 124) of IDU in St. Petersburg, Russia

Total samplea (n = 124) Males (n = 82) Females (n = 42)
Age (mean, SD) 28.8, 5.0 29.7, 5.0 26.9, 4.8
Highest level of education, n (%)
 High school graduate or less 50 (40) 32 (39) 18 (43)
 Technical school 10 (8) 7 (8) 3 (7)
 Specialist education 48 (39) 35 (43) 13 (31)
 Any university education 16 (13) 8 (10) 8 (19)
Permanent place of employment, n (%)
 Yes 105 (85) 70 (85) 35 (83)
 No 19 (15) 12 (15) 7 (17)
Marital status, n (%)
 Married or living together 20 (16) 12 (15) 8 (19)
 Not married or separated 104 (84) 70 (85) 34 (81)
Drug used: heroin, n (%)
 Yes 115 (93) 77 (94) 38 (90)
 No 9 (7) 5 (6) 4 (10)
Drug used: methamphetamines, n (%)
 Yes 24 (19) 16 (20) 8 (19)
 No 100 (81) 66 (80) 34 (81)
Duration of drug use (mean, SD) 9.6, 4.7 10.2, 4.9 8.5, 4.2
Self-reported HIV status, n (%)
 Positive 60 (48) 39 (48) 20 (48)
 Negative/Do not know 64 (52) 43 (52) 22 (52)
Trust in drug networks,b n (%)
 High 43 (35) 23 (38) 20 (50)
 Low 79 (65) 59 (62) 20 (50)
Network size, n (%)
 < 3 74 (62) 44 (56) 30 (73)
 ≥3 46 (38) 35 (44) 11 (27)
Stranger present in network,c n (%)
 Yes 32 (34) 26 (43) 6 (19)
 No 61 (66) 35 (57) 26 (81)
Shared, sold, or lent an already used syringe, n (%)
 Yes 50 (41) 34 (43) 16 (38)
 No 72 (59) 46 (57) 26 (62)
Ever tested for HIV, n (%)
 Yes 101 (81) 68 (82) 33 (79)
 No 23 (19) 14 (17) 9 (21)
a

May not sum to 124 due to missing data

b

Sum of trust questions 2–4, dichotomized at midpoint (low trust corresponds to trust score <8 and high trust ≥ 8)

c

Only reported from IDU who injected with at least one other person in the past 30 days