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. 2022 Feb 12;241:109355. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109355

Table 1.

Characteristics of 773 persons living with HIV enrolled in a NIDA-funded cohort (and 1286 surveys completed by those persons) who completed 1 or 2 surveys about their experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic, 11 May 2020–15 February 2021.

Observations Persons
N = 1286 (%) N = 773 (%)
Agea 51 (37, 58) 50 (35, 57)
Male sex 943 (73) 576 (75)
Race/ethnicity
 Black, non-Hispanic 883 (69) 530 (69)
 White, non-Hispanic 117 (9) 68 (9)
 Hispanic 238 (19) 142 (18)
 Other, non-Hispanic 48 (4) 33 (4)
Unstable housing 68 (5) 45 (6)
Employment
 Employed 237 (18) 134 (17)
 Unstable employment 167 (13) 113 (15)
 Unemployed 882 (69) 526 (68)
Food insecure 354 (28) 228 (29)
Moderate-to-severe anxiety 228 (18) 149 (19)
Brief Resiliency Scale
 Low resilience 198 (15) 125 (16)
 Normal resilience 877 (68) 522 (68)
 High resilience 211 (16) 126 (16)
Interruptions to mental health care 644 (50) 415 (54)
Recent drug use
 Smoking 548 (43) 342 (44)
 Hazardous alcohol use 138 (11) 82 (11)
 Cocaine 126 (10) 78 (10)
 Opioids 59 (5) 40 (5)
 Cannabis 463 (36) 291 (38)
Current substance use treatment 241 (19) 160 (21)
 Disruptions to substance use treatment 167 (69) 116 (73)
Current opioid agonist therapy 99 (8) 68 (9)
 Disruptions to opioid agonist therapy 26 (26) 18 (26)
≥ “Much” disruptions of COVID-19 pandemic 848 (66) 519 (67)
Substantial worry due to the pandemic 1001 (78) 592 (77)
a

Median (Q1, Q3).