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Associations between housing stability and injecting frequency fluctuations: findings from a cohort of people who inject drugs in Montréal, Canada

Authors :
Élise Roy
Marie-Pierre Sylvestre
Jason Grebely
Emmanuel Fortier
Didier Jutras-Aswad
Andreea Adelina Artenie
Nanor Minoyan
Julie Bruneau
Source :
Drug and Alcohol Dependence. 206:107744
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Background The relationship between housing stability and drug injecting is complex, as both outcomes fluctuate over time. The objectives were to identify short-term trajectories of housing stability and injecting frequency among people who inject drugs (PWID) and examine how patterns of injecting frequency relate to those of housing stability. Methods At three-month intervals, PWID enrolled between 2011 and 2016 in the Hepatitis Cohort completed an interviewer-administered questionnaire and were tested for hepatitis C and HIV infections. At each visit, participants reported, for each of the past three months, the accommodation they lived in the longest (stable/unstable) and the number of injecting days (0–30). Group-based dual trajectory modeling was conducted to identify housing stability and injecting frequency trajectories evolving concomitantly over 12 months and estimate the probabilities of following injecting trajectories conditional upon housing trajectories. Results 386 participants were included (mean age 40.0, 82 % male). Three housing stability trajectories were identified: sustained (53 %), declining (20 %), and improving (27 %). Five injecting frequency trajectories were identified: sporadic (26 %), infrequent (34 %), increasing (15 %), decreasing (11 %), and frequent (13 %). PWID with improving housing were less likely to increase injecting (8 %) compared to those with sustained (17 %) or declining housing (17 %). Conclusions Improving housing was associated with a lower probability of increasing injecting compared to declining housing, while sustained housing stability was associated with a higher probability of increasing injecting compared to improving housing. Therefore, policies to improve PWID’s access to stable housing are warranted and may reduce, to some extent, drug injecting and related harms.

Details

ISSN :
03768716
Volume :
206
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dddf2858863e0c57b9d9968b5a25da2e