Characteristics associated with motivation to stop substance use and improve skin and needle hygiene among hospitalized patients who inject drugs.

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Substance abuse Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1080/08897077.2021.2007520
Simeon D Kimmel, Kristina T Phillips, Bradley J Anderson, Michael D Stein
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Abstract

Background: Hospitalizations for people who inject drugs (PWID) are opportunities to address substance use. However, little is known about hospitalized PWIDs' motivation to stop substance use or improve skin and needle hygiene, common means for reducing injection sequelae. Methods: We used baseline data from a randomized controlled trial of a behavioral intervention to improve skin and needle hygiene among 252 hospitalized PWID between January 2014 and June 2018. We examined motivation (scale 1-10) to stop substance use, use new needles, and clean skin and used multiple linear regression models to evaluate characteristics associated with these outcomes. Results: PWID were recruited during injection-related (154, 61.1%) and non-injection-related hospitalizations (98, 38.9%). Motivation to stop substance use was 7.11 (SD = 2.67), use new needles was 7.8 (SD = 1.9), and clean skin was 6.7 (SD = 2.3). In adjusted models, experiencing an injection-related hospitalization was not significantly associated (p > 0.05) with motivation to stop substance use (β = -0.76, SE = 0.299), use new needles (β = 0.301, SE = 0.255), or clean skin (β = 0.476, SE = 0.323). Number of past-year skin and soft tissue infections was negatively associated with motivation to use new needles (β = -0.109, SE = 0.049, p < 0.05) and clean skin (β = -0.131, SE = 0.062, p < 0.05). Greater opioid withdrawal was associated with lower motivation to use new needles (β = -0.275, SE = 0.92, p < 0.01). Conclusions: Among hospitalized PWID, motivation to stop substance use and improve skin and needle hygiene was moderately high, but injection-related hospitalizations were not associated with greater motivation. Efforts to reduce injection sequelae for all hospitalized PWID are needed.

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与住院注射毒品患者停止使用药物及改善皮肤和针头卫生的动机相关的特征。
背景:注射吸毒者(PWID)住院是解决药物使用问题的机会。然而,人们对住院注射吸毒者停止使用药物或改善皮肤和针头卫生(减少注射后遗症的常用方法)的动机知之甚少。方法:我们使用了一项随机对照试验的基线数据,该试验旨在改善 2014 年 1 月至 2018 年 6 月期间 252 名住院感染者的皮肤和针头卫生状况。我们考察了停止使用药物、使用新针头和清洁皮肤的动机(量表 1-10),并使用多元线性回归模型评估了与这些结果相关的特征。结果:在注射相关住院(154 人,占 61.1%)和非注射相关住院(98 人,占 38.9%)期间招募了注射吸毒者。停止使用药物的动机为 7.11(标准差 = 2.67),使用新针头的动机为 7.8(标准差 = 1.9),皮肤清洁的动机为 6.7(标准差 = 2.3)。在调整模型中,注射相关住院经历与停止药物使用动机(β = -0.76,SE = 0.299)、使用新针头(β = 0.301,SE = 0.255)或皮肤清洁(β = 0.476,SE = 0.323)无显著相关性(p > 0.05)。过去一年皮肤和软组织感染次数与使用新针头的动机呈负相关(β = -0.109,SE = 0.049,P SE = 0.062,P SE = 0.92,P 结论):在住院的吸毒者中,停止使用药物和改善皮肤及针头卫生的积极性较高,但注射相关的住院治疗与更高的积极性无关。需要努力减少所有住院感染者的注射后遗症。
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来源期刊
Substance abuse
Substance abuse SUBSTANCE ABUSE-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
2.90%
发文量
88
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Now in its 4th decade of publication, Substance Abuse journal is a peer-reviewed journal that serves as the official publication of Association for Medical Education and Research in Substance Abuse (AMERSA) in association with The International Society of Addiction Medicine (ISAM) and the International Coalition for Addiction Studies in Education (INCASE). Substance Abuse journal offers wide-ranging coverage for healthcare professionals, addiction specialists and others engaged in research, education, clinical care, and service delivery and evaluation. It features articles on a variety of topics, including: Interdisciplinary addiction research, education, and treatment Clinical trial, epidemiology, health services, and translation addiction research Implementation science related to addiction Innovations and subsequent outcomes in addiction education Addiction policy and opinion International addiction topics Clinical care regarding addictions.
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