Neighborhood Variations in Syringe Access, Use, and Discard - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Neighborhood Variations in Syringe Access, Use, and Discard

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... IDUs having their own residences are those with pharmacies but no SEP van sites. ... Homelessness is highest in neighborhoods with pharmacies and SEP van sites. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neighborhood Variations in Syringe Access, Use, and Discard


1
Neighborhood Variations in Syringe Access, Use,
and Discard
  • Robert Heimer, Kaveh Khoshnood, Wei Teng, David
    Buchanan, Tom Stopka, Merrill
    SingerAcknowledgement The research described
    in this paper is supported by the National
    Institute on Drug Abuse, grant R01 DA12569,
    Merrill Singer, Principal Investigator.

2
(No Transcript)
3
I-91 Study HIV Risk in Syringe Access, Use and
Discard
  • Neighborhood based analysis of IDUs in New
    Haven, Hartford, and Springfield.
  • New Haven and Hartford have SEPs and legal
    pharmacy access, Springfield does not.
  • Recruitment of 320 IDUs in each city.
  • Quantitative data collection instrument focused
    on HIV transmission risk behaviors in the past 30
    days.

4
Neighborhood Level Analysis of Quantitative Data
from I-91 Study
  • Three main categories for syringe access
    considered pharmacies, syringe exchange
    programs (SEPs), all other sources.
  • Formative research identified neighbor-hoods
    with high concentrations of IDUs.
  • Research focused on those that had SEPs only
    (4), pharmacies that sell to IDUs (7), both SEPs
    and pharmacies (2), and neither (11).

5
Sociodemographic Analysis of I-91 Neighborhoods
  • To date, 875 IDUs recruited into this study.
  • The four categories of neighborhood do not
    differ in terms of participants sex, age,
    schooling, self-reported HIV or hepatitis
    serostatus, and phsyical diability.
  • Salient significant differences are worth
    considering in detail.

6
Sociodemiographic Differences I
  • Race Ethnicity
  • Latinos most populous, white least populous in
    neighborhoods without either pharmacy or SEP.
  • Blacks evenly distributed across all four
    categories of neighborhoods.
  • Income
  • Poorest neighborhoods are those without
    pharmacies that sell syringes to IDUs.

7
Sociodemiographic Differences II
  • Housing and Homelessness
  • Neighborhoods with highest percentage of IDUs
    having their own residences are those with
    pharmacies but no SEP van sites.
  • Neighborhoods with lowest percentage of IDUs
    having their own residences are those with
    pharmacies and SEP van sites.
  • Homelessness is highest in neighborhoods with
    pharmacies and SEP van sites.

8
Syringe Acquisition I
  • SEPs were the major source of syringe in
    neighborhoods with SEP stops, regardless of
    presence of pharmacies.
  • Pharmacies were the major source in
    neighborhoods with pharmacies, but without SEP
    stops.
  • Unsafe sources predominated in those
    neighborhoods without SEPs or pharmacy.

9
Syringe Acquisition II
  • Few IDUs in neighborhoods with neither acquired
    syringes from a pharmacy (13.7) or from an SEP
    (15.6).
  • Half the IDUs in neighborhoods with an SEP stop
    but no pharmacy acquired syringes from a pharmacy.

10
Syringe Use Risks I Shared Syringes
11
Syringe Use Risks II Reused Syringes
12
Syringe Discard
  • IDUs in neighborhoods without either SEPs or
    pharmacies are 2.5 times as likely to stash
    syringes for later use (26.1 vs. 10.3).
  • IDUs in neighborhoods without either SEPs or
    pharmacies are twice a likely to publicly discard
    their syringes.

13
Arrests for Syringe Possession
14
Conclusions
  • IDUs who reside in neighborhoods where they are
    denied local access to clean syringes through
    SEPs or over-the-counter pharmacy sales are more
    likely to be Latino and poor.
  • These IDUs are more likely to get their syringes
    from an unreliable source, share and reuse
    syringes, improperly discard syringes, and be
    arrested or detained for syringe possession.

15
Caveats
  • These data were obtained in three cities.
    Springfield, MA differs from its Connecticut
    cousins in that neither SEPs nor pharmacy sales
    are legal there.
  • Springfield IDUs may unduly influence the
    findings of higher risk in those neighborhoods
    lacking SEPs and pharmacies that sell syringes
    over the counter.

16
Recommendations
  • Increasing access to clean syringes is likely to
    be associated with decreases in the transmission
    of syringe-borne viruses.
  • More pharmacies should be encouraged to sell
    syringes without a prescription.
  • Hispanic neighborhoods, especially, need such
    pharmacies.
  • Springfield should adopt a public health
    approach to its IDUs.
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