“Beyond Safer Injecting”—Health and Social Needs and Acceptance of Support among Clients of a Supervised Injecting Facility
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Sample
3.2. Aggregate Health and Social Indicators
3.3. Transitions between Lower- and Higher-Risk Health and Social Indicators
3.4. Current Issues and Extent of Support Requested
3.5. Factors Associated with Willingness to Discuss Issues with Staff
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic | Survey Participants n = 182 % (n/N) | Non-Participants n = 318 % (n/N) |
---|---|---|
Gender | ||
Female | 29 (53) | 24 (77) |
Male | 69 (126) | 74 (235) |
Transgender | 1 (3) | 2 (5) |
Not stated | 0 (0) | <1 (2) |
Age, in years—median (mean; SD) | 42 (43.0; 9.0) | 43 (42.6; 6.9) |
Aboriginality | ||
Neither Aboriginal nor Torres Strait Islander | 78 (141) | 73 (232) |
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander | 17 (31) | 16 (50) |
Did not specify | 2 (3) | 1 (3) |
Missing | 4 (7) | 10 (31) |
Other characteristics (assessed at initial visit) | ||
Stable accommodation | 60 (92/153) | 67 (86/172) |
Employed | 20 (35/174) | 22 (63/288) |
Ever in drug treatment | 61 (111/182) | 59 (188/318) |
Ever in prison | 45 (77/94) | 41 (117/284) |
Ever overdosed | 38 (64/169) | 39 (108/278) |
Health issue | 36 (52/143) | 29 (67/229) |
Injected drugs daily * | 55 (94/171) | 45 (124/277) |
Client of local primary health care service ** | 33 (60/182) | 23 (74/318) |
Drug used most (assessed in the 8 months before survey) a | ||
Heroin | 54 | 52 |
Oxycodone | 5 | 5 |
Buprenorphine ** | 8 | 3 |
Methadone | 6 | 8 |
Morphine | 6 | 6 |
Cocaine | 4 | 2 |
Methamphetamine | 31 | 40 |
Service use—median (mean; SD) | ||
Number of visits since initial visit *** | 313 (796.2; 1308.6) | 97 (406.2; 811.6) |
Number of visits during survey period *** | 5 (9.0; 10.4) | 2 (2.9; 3.9) |
Number of referrals in the past 12 months *** | 1 (2.0; 2.7) | 0 (0.6; 1.4) |
Number of years since initial visit ** | 10.5 (9.4; 8.5) | 8.3 (8.2; 7.6) |
Age in years when first injected | 18 (19.3; 6.9) | 18 (19.6; 7.0) |
Health and Social Indicators | N | At the Time of the Survey % | At Initial Visit % | t-Test |
---|---|---|---|---|
Unstable housing | 153 | 39 | 40 | −0.242 |
Unemployed | 172 | 92 | 80 | −3.795 ** |
Government income support | 172 | 88 | 73 | 0.000 *** |
Currently has a physical health issue | 105 | 69 | 38 | −5.608 ** |
Currently has a mental health issue | 176 | 64 | 18 | 0.000 *** |
Attendance at a nearby primary healthcare service | 182 | 73 | 33 | −8.596 ** |
Injected daily in the past month | 171 | 62 | 55 | −1.438 |
Injected mostly opioid | 182 | 58 | 56 | −2.017 * |
Engaged in drug treatment | 181 | 93 | 61 | −8.778 ** |
Has been to prison | 171 | 73 | 45 | −9.936 ** |
Has had an overdose | 167 | 61 | 38 | 5.187 ** |
Interested in Support Now or at Next Visit | Not Interested in Support or Does Not Know | |
---|---|---|
% (n/N) | % (n/N) | |
Take-home naloxone training | ||
All participants | 48 (51/106) | 52 (55/106) |
Participants not previously trained | 44 (41/93) | 56 (52/93) |
Hepatitis C testing and treatment | ||
All participants | 25 (41/166) | 75 (125/166) |
Participants not previously tested | 18 (2/11) | 82 (9/11) |
Drug treatment | 21 (38/181) | 79 (143/181) |
Physical health support | 21 (29/135) | 79 (106/135) |
Accommodation | 20 (36/182) | 80 (146/182) |
Mental health support | 12 (19/165) | 88 (146/165) |
Support (%) | ||
Any | 63 | 37 |
Excluding take-home naloxone training | 52 | 48 |
Willingness to Discuss with Staff AOR (p Value) | |||
---|---|---|---|
Housing Issues | Drug Use and Treatment | Take-Home Naloxone Training | |
Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander origin 1 | - | - | 4.41 (0.024) |
Heroin used most at the Sydney SIF | - | 3.90 (0.02) 1 | 3.62 (0.054) 2 |
Methamphetamine used most the Sydney SIF | - | 2.27 (0.086) | 3.46 (0.069) |
Buprenorphine used most at the Sydney SIF | 0.068 (0.042) | - | - |
Oxycodone used in past month at the Sydney SIF | 3.25 (0.068) | - | - |
Expressed this issue as the most important | 12.74 (p < 0.001) 3 | 3.18 (0.026) 4 | - |
Currently in unstable accommodation | 5.57 (0.009) | - | - |
Currently in drug treatment | - | 0.43 (0.044) | - |
Ever in drug treatment | - | 0.42 (0.087) | - |
Previously received take-home naloxone training | - | 2.28 (0.057) | - |
Experienced overdose outside of the Sydney SIF | 3.32 (0.072) | - | 5.12 (0.008) |
Experienced overdose for the first time since initial visit | - | - | 0.34 (0.081) |
Number of observations | n = 112 | n = 159 | n = 78 5 |
LR chi2, df, (p) | 38.33, 5, (p < 0.001) | 25.65, 6, (0.003) | 15.47, 5, (0.0085) |
Pseudo R2 | 0.345 | 0.1530 | 0.1431 |
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Belackova, V.; Silins, E.; Salmon, A.M.; Jauncey, M.; Day, C.A. “Beyond Safer Injecting”—Health and Social Needs and Acceptance of Support among Clients of a Supervised Injecting Facility. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 2032. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16112032
Belackova V, Silins E, Salmon AM, Jauncey M, Day CA. “Beyond Safer Injecting”—Health and Social Needs and Acceptance of Support among Clients of a Supervised Injecting Facility. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(11):2032. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16112032
Chicago/Turabian StyleBelackova, Vendula, Edmund Silins, Allison M. Salmon, Marianne Jauncey, and Carolyn A. Day. 2019. "“Beyond Safer Injecting”—Health and Social Needs and Acceptance of Support among Clients of a Supervised Injecting Facility" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 11: 2032. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16112032
APA StyleBelackova, V., Silins, E., Salmon, A. M., Jauncey, M., & Day, C. A. (2019). “Beyond Safer Injecting”—Health and Social Needs and Acceptance of Support among Clients of a Supervised Injecting Facility. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(11), 2032. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16112032