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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
. 2003 Sep 1;94(5):355–359. doi: 10.1007/BF03403560

Requiring Help Injecting as a Risk Factor for HIV Infection in the Vancouver Epidemic

Implications for HIV Prevention

Evan Wood 19,29,, Patricia M Spittal 19,29, Thomas Kerr 19,39, Will Small 19, Mark W Tyndall 19,29, Michael V O’Shaughnessy 19,49, Martin T Schechter 19,29
PMCID: PMC6979944  PMID: 14577743

Abstract

Background

Requiring help injecting was recently associated with syringe sharing, and later HIV-1 and HCV seroconversion among injection drug users (IDU) in Vancouver. This risk factor remains poorly understood. The present study investigates this risk factor among Vancouver IDUs.

Methods

We evaluated factors associated with requiring help injecting among participants enrolled in the Vancouver Injection Drug User Study (VIDUS) using univariate and logistic regression analyses. VIDUS participants who were followed-up during the period December 2000 to December 2001 were eligible for the present analyses. We also evaluated self-reported reasons for requiring help injecting.

Results

Overall, 661 active injection drug users were interviewed during the study period. Among this population, 151 (22.8%) had required help injecting during the last six months, whereas 510 (77.2%) indicated that they had not. Variables that were independently associated with requiring help injecting included borrowing a used syringe (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 2.18), frequent cocaine injection (AOR = 1.57), and female gender (AOR = 2.29). Among males, the most common reasons for requiring help injecting were: having no viable veins (77.1%), and anxiousness or being drug sick (42.9%). Among females, the most common reasons reported were: having no viable veins (71.6%), jugular injection or ‘jugging’ (45.7%), and being anxious or drug sick (27.2%). Almost twice as many females (13.6% vs 7.1%) reported not knowing how to inject as their reason for requiring help injecting.

Conclusion

Although current public health approaches, such as needle exchange, are unable to address the concerns associated with requiring help injecting, available evidence suggests that safer injecting facilities have the potential to substantially mitigate this risk behaviour.

Footnotes

Acknowledgements: Evan Wood is supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), the George F. Elliot Foundation, and the BC Health Research Foundation. Martin Schechter is a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Senior Investigator. We also thank Bonnie Devlin, John Charette, Kathy Churchill, Caitlin Johnston, Robin Brooks, Steve Kain, Guillermo Fernandez, Peter Vann, and Nancy Laliberte for their research and administrative assistance; and all the participants in the VIDUS study.

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