加利福尼亚州洛杉矶市和科罗拉多州丹佛市社区招募的阿片类注射吸毒者的睡眠健康状况

Avaion Ruth, Siddhi S. Ganesh, Pooja Shah, Erin E. Gould, Katrina Ninh, Rachel Carmen Ceasar, Dustin T. Duncan, Ricky N. Bluthenthal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期睡眠不足和睡眠质量差与高血压、糖尿病、抑郁症、心脏病和中风有关。有关药物使用和睡眠的研究通常以接受治疗或正在接受治疗的人群为研究对象,但对社区招募的注射吸毒者(PWID)的睡眠健康却缺乏研究。为了填补这一文献空白,我们研究了社区招募的注射吸毒者中与睡眠不足和睡眠质量差有关的因素。2021 年至 2022 年期间,我们在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶市和科罗拉多州丹佛市招募并采访了 472 名积极使用阿片类药物的注射吸毒者(过去 30 天内注射过)。参与者完成了计算机辅助访谈,访谈内容包括人口统计学、生计测量、毒品使用模式、注射相关行为、健康风险以及过去 3 个月的睡眠时间和质量。我们使用描述性统计方法分析了完整回答睡眠项目的受试者(n = 464)的所有变量。双变量分析采用卡方检验和 t 检验确定与睡眠测量相关的因素。去除共线变量后,二项式线性多变量回归计算了最近 3 个月睡眠不足和睡眠质量差的风险比 (RR)。参与者的睡眠时间较短(平均值=4.99,标准差(SD)=2.70),76%的人报告睡眠不足,62%的人报告睡眠质量差。双变量分析显示,这两项睡眠指标都与吸毒、高生存分数、暴力伤害和不良健康状况有关。多变量分析显示,与低生存率相比,高生存率得分可预测睡眠不足(RR = 1.31)和睡眠质量差(RR = 1.69)。在结构脆弱的社区招募的吸毒者中,睡眠质量差的情况很普遍,这是由与不良睡眠结果相关的生存指数衡量的。当务之急是对结构性干预措施进行进一步研究,以解决吸毒者的睡眠问题及随后的健康问题。
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Sleep Health among Community-Recruited Opioid-Using People Who Inject Drugs in Los Angeles, CA and Denver, CO

Chronic insufficient and poor-quality sleep are linked to hypertension, diabetes, depression, heart attack, and stroke. While studies on substance use and sleep typically focus on people in or entering treatment, there is a lack of research on sleep health among community-recruited people who inject drugs (PWID). To address this literature gap, we examined factors associated with insufficient and poor-quality sleep among community-recruited PWID. We recruited and interviewed 472 active opioid-using PWID (injected within the last 30 days) in Los Angeles, CA and Denver, CO between 2021 and 2022. Participants completed computer-assisted interviews covering demographics, subsistence measures, drug use patterns, injection-related behaviors, health risks, and sleep duration and quality in the last 3 months. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze all variables for subjects with complete responses to sleep items (n = 464). Bivariate analyses determined factors associated with sleep measures using chi-square and t-tests. Collinear variables were removed, and binomial linear multivariable regression calculated risk ratios (RR) for insufficient and poor-quality sleep in the last 3 months. Participants exhibited low sleep duration (mean = 4.99, standard deviation (SD) = 2.70), with 76% reporting insufficient sleep and 62% poor-quality sleep. Bivariate analyses associated both sleep measures with drug use, high subsistence scores, violent victimization, and poor health outcomes. Multivariable analyses showed a high subsistence score predicting insufficient (RR = 1.31) and poor-quality sleep (RR = 1.69) compared to low subsistence. Poor sleep health is common among structurally vulnerable community-recruited PWID, as measured by subsistence index associated with adverse sleep outcomes. Further research on structural interventions to address sleep and subsequent health outcomes among PWID is imperative.

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