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The prevalence of injecting drug use in a Russian city: implications for harm reduction and coverage
Author(s) -
Platt Lucy,
Hickman Matthew,
Rhodes Tim,
Mikhailova Larissa,
Karavashkin Victor,
Vlasov Alexander,
Tilling Kate,
Hope Vivian,
Khutorksoy Mikhail,
Renton Adrian
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
addiction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.424
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1360-0443
pISSN - 0965-2140
DOI - 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2004.00848.x
Subject(s) - harm reduction , medicine , population , confidence interval , demography , context (archaeology) , public health , poisson regression , environmental health , geography , archaeology , sociology , nursing
Aim  This study sought to estimate the prevalence of injecting drug users (IDU) in Togliatti city and to examine the implications of these estimates for HIV prevalence and harm reduction. Design  Routine data sources of IDUs were identified. Covariate capture–recapture techniques were used on the individuals identified on the three data sources and used to estimate the number of IDU ‘not observed’ by the data sources, and thereby estimate the prevalence of IDU. Setting  Togliatti City, Samara Oblast, Russian Federation. Participants  IDUs recorded on three data sources (narcology records, HIV positive test results and police arrest data) during 2001. Measurements  Poisson regression models were fitted to the observed data, with interactions between data sources fitted to replicate ‘dependencies’ between those data sources. To select the best model the goodness of fit was approximated by χ 2 distribution and the best‐fitting model was selected on the basis of standard information criteria and log likelihood ratio tests. Findings  The total estimated population of IDUs is 20 226 [95% confidence interval (CI): 16 971–24 749] giving a population prevalence of 5.4% (95% CI: 4.5–6.6%) of the registered population and 2.7% (95% CI: 2.4–3.5%) of the population (including migrants) aged 15–44 years. For every one IDU in contact with a service there were three out of contact. Conclusions  There  is  a  high  prevalence  of  IDU  which,  in  the  context  of  a fast‐emerging IDU‐associated HIV epidemic, will have serious public health implications.

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