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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
. 2006 May 1;97(3):207–209. doi: 10.1007/BF03405586

Characterizing the Drug-injecting Networks of Cocaine and Heroin Injectors in Montreal

Prithwish De 111,, Ann Jolly 211,311, Joseph Cox 111,411, Jean-François Boivin 111,411
PMCID: PMC6975585  PMID: 16827407

Abstract

Background: There is little understanding about how the social networks of cocaine injectors are different from those of heroin users and about how such differences are associated with injection risk behaviours. Therefore, the objective of this study was to compare drug-injecting network characteristics of cocaine and heroin injectors believed to be associated with a risk of bloodborne infections.

Methods: Active injection drug users (IDUs) were recruited between April 2004 and January 2005 from three syringe exchange and two methadone treatment programs in Montreal, Canada. Characteristics of each participant and of up to 10 social network members (IDU and non-IDU) with whom frequent contact had occurred in the past month were elicited using a structured, interviewer-administered questionnaire. The current analysis focussed on the drug-injecting network members. Logistic regression was used to examine network characteristics in relation to cocaine and heroin injection.

Results: Of 282 study subjects, 81% used cocaine and 19% used heroin as their primary injected drug in the past 6 months. Compared to heroin injectors, participants who injected cocaine had lower odds of knowing their network members for a longer time (OR=0.92, 0.85–0.99), were more likely to report a larger IDU network (OR=1.64, 1.18–2.29) and have IDU partners who had a history of attending shooting galleries (OR=2.42, 1.05–5.56).

Interpretation: This study identified high-risk network-related factors associated with bloodborne infections in cocaine injectors. Prevention efforts may benefit from tailoring interventions according to type of drug used, with particular attention to the drug injecting-network of IDUs.

MeSH terms: HIV, hepatitis C virus, injection drug use, social network, cocaine, heroin

Footnotes

Acknowledgements: This paper was presented in part at the 96th Annual CPHA Conference, Ottawa, Canada. Prithwish De is supported by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Doctoral Research Award and by the CIHR Transdisciplinary Research Training Initiative in Population and Public Health of Quebec.

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