The first hit: Circumstances surrounding initiation into injecting

被引:154
作者
Crofts, N
Louie, R
Rosenthal, D
Jolley, D
机构
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.1360-0443.1996.918118710.x
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Initiation into injecting is a crucial event for continued reproduction of an injecting drug using (IDU) population and for exposure to blood-borne viruses, but little is known about how this happens. Three hundred young injectors were interviewed in Melbourne by peer workers within the first few years of beginning to inject, about the circumstances surrounding their initiation. Most had indications of social disruption, including having left school early, unemployment, family disruption, homelessness and incarceration. First drug injected was most often amphetamines (average age 16 years), most having already used amphetamines by a different route of administration, but with a steady movement thereafter to heroin as the drug of choice. The most common scenario was one in which injecting was unplanned but the person was active in bringing about the initiation. Most identified a significant other who initiated them (few of whom were dealers), and over half had subsequently initiated others into injecting, on average 0.6 per year; after 5 years 237 young injectors had initiated at least 420 others. Those who initiated multiple others were more likely to be unemployed, to inject multiple drugs and to have dealt. Modelling injecting as a communicable phenomenon, where appropriate, may help estimate population dynamics among IDUs. Peer education programmes ave likely to be the most effective harm reduction approach among new injectors.
引用
收藏
页码:1187 / 1196
页数:10
相关论文
共 12 条
[1]   SPREAD OF BLOODBORNE VIRUSES AMONG AUSTRALIAN PRISON ENTRANTS [J].
CROFTS, N ;
STEWART, T ;
HEARNE, P ;
PING, XY ;
BRESCHKIN, AM ;
LOCARNINI, SA .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1995, 310 (6975) :285-288
[2]   BLOOD-BORNE VIRUS-INFECTIONS AMONG AUSTRALIAN INJECTING DRUG-USERS - IMPLICATIONS FOR SPREAD OF HIV [J].
CROFTS, N ;
HOPPER, JL ;
MILNER, R ;
BRESCHKIN, AM ;
BOWDEN, DS ;
LOCARNINI, SA .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1994, 10 (06) :687-694
[3]   HEPATITIS-C VIRUS-INFECTION AMONG A COHORT OF VICTORIAN INJECTING DRUG-USERS [J].
CROFTS, N ;
HOPPER, JL ;
BOWDEN, DS ;
BRESCHKIN, AM ;
MILNER, R ;
LOCARNINI, SA .
MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 1993, 159 (04) :237-241
[4]  
CROFTS N, 1994, AIDS, V8, pS45
[5]   TRANSITIONS BETWEEN ROUTES OF ADMINISTRATION OF REGULAR AMPHETAMINE USERS [J].
DARKE, S ;
COHEN, J ;
ROSS, J ;
HANDO, J ;
HALL, W .
ADDICTION, 1994, 89 (09) :1077-1083
[6]   DRUG PREVENTION IN JUNIOR-HIGH - A MULTISITE LONGITUDINAL TEST [J].
ELLICKSON, PL ;
BELL, RM .
SCIENCE, 1990, 247 (4948) :1299-1305
[7]  
FRIEDMAN S R, 1991, AIDS Care, V3, P239, DOI 10.1080/09540129108253069
[8]  
HEATHER N, 1993, PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS H, pR5
[9]  
Kaldor J, 1993, Drug Alcohol Rev, V12, P175, DOI 10.1080/09595239300185611
[10]   PATTERNS OF DRUG-USE FROM ADOLESCENCE TO YOUNG ADULTHOOD .1. PERIODS OF RISK FOR INITIATION, CONTINUED USE, AND DISCONTINUATION [J].
KANDEL, DB ;
LOGAN, JA .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1984, 74 (07) :660-666