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首页> 外文期刊>Canadian Medical Association Journal: Journal de l'Association Medicale Canadienne >The Cedar Project: risk factors for transition to injection drug use among young, urban Aboriginal people.
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The Cedar Project: risk factors for transition to injection drug use among young, urban Aboriginal people.

机译:雪松项目:年轻的城市原住民向注射吸毒过渡的风险因素。

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摘要

BACKGROUND: Studies suggest that Aboriginal people in Canada are over-represented among people using injection drugs. The factors associated with transitioning to the use of injection drugs among young Aboriginal people in Canada are not well understood. METHODS: The Cedar Project is a prospective cohort study (2003-2007) involving young Aboriginal people in Vancouver and Prince George, British Columbia, who use illicit drugs. Participants' venous blood samples were tested for antibodies to HIV and the hepatitis C virus, and drug use was confirmed using saliva screens. The primary outcomes were use of injection drugs at baseline and tranisition to injection drug use in the six months before each follow-up interview. RESULTS: Of 605 participants, 335 (55.4%) reported using injection drugs at baseline. Young people who used injection drugs tended to be older than those who did not, female and in a relationship. Participants who injected drugs were also more likely than those who did not to have been denied shelter because of their drug use, to have been incarcerated, to have a mental illness and to have been involved in sex work. Transition to injection drug use occurred among 39 (14.4%) participants, yielding a crude incidence rate of 19.8% and an incidence density of 11.5 participants per 100 person-years. In unadjusted analysis, transition to injection drug use was associated with being female (odds ratio [OR] 1.98, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.06-3.72), involved in sex work (OR 3.35, 95% CI 1.75-6.40), having a history of sexually transmitted infection (OR 2.01, 95% CI 1.07-3.78) and using drugs with sex-work clients (OR 2.51, 95% CI 1.19-5.32). In adjusted analysis, transition to injection drug use remained associated with involvement in sex work (adjusted OR 3.94, 95% CI 1.45-10.71). INTERPRETATION: The initiation rate for injection drug use of 11.5 participants per 100 person-years among participants in the Cedar Project is distressing. Young Aboriginal women in our study were twice as likely to inject drugs as men, and participants who injected drugs at baseline were more than twice as likely as those who did not to be involved in sex work.
机译:背景:研究表明,在使用注射药物的人群中,加拿大的原住民人数过多。在加拿大的年轻原住民中,与使用注射药物过渡有关的因素尚不十分清楚。方法:“雪松项目”是一项前瞻性队列研究(2003-2007年),涉及使用非法药物的温哥华年轻土著居民和不列颠哥伦比亚省乔治王子市。对参与者的静脉血样本进行了针对HIV和丙型肝炎病毒的抗体测试,并通过唾液筛查证实了药物的使用。主要结局是在基线时使用注射药物,并在每次随访访谈前的六个月内过渡到注射药物使用。结果:在605名参与者中,有335名(55.4%)报告在基线使用注射药物。使用注射毒品的年轻人往往比不使用注射毒品的人年龄更大,有女性并且有恋爱关系。与没有因吸毒而被拒绝庇护,被监禁,患有精神疾病以及从事性工作的人相比,注射毒品的参与者也更有可能。有39位(14.4%)参与者发生了向注射吸毒的过渡,每100人年的原始发病率为19.8%,犯罪密度为11.5名参与者。在未经调整的分析中,使用注射药物与女性相关(优势比[OR] 1.98,95%置信区间(CI)1.06-3.72),参与性工作(OR 3.35,95%CI 1.75-6.40),有性传播感染史(OR 2.01,95%CI 1.07-3.78)并与性工作对象一起使用药物(OR 2.51,95%CI 1.19-5.32)。在调整后的分析中,向注射吸毒的过渡仍与参与性工作有关(调整后的OR 3.94,95%CI 1.45-10.71)。解释:在Cedar项目的参与者中,每100人年11.5名参与者的注射毒品使用起始比率令人痛苦。在我们的研究中,年轻的土著妇女注射毒品的可能性是男性的两倍,并且在基线时注射毒品的参与者的可能性是不从事性工作的参与者的两倍以上。

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