7 results on '"Kirtadze, Irma"'
Search Results
2. Perceived acceptability of and willingness to use syringe vending machines: results of a cross-sectional survey of out-of-service people who inject drugs in Tbilisi, Georgia
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Otiashvili, David, Kirtadze, Irma, Vardanashvili, Irina, Tabatadze, Mzia, and Ober, Allison J.
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- 2019
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3. Drug preparation, injection, and sharing practices in Tajikistan: a qualitative study in Kulob and Khorog.
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Otiashvili, David, Latypov, Alisher, Kirtadze, Irma, Ibragimov, Umedjon, and Zule, William
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HIV infection transmission ,HEPATITIS C transmission ,DRUG utilization ,EPIDEMICS ,QUALITATIVE research ,FOCUS groups ,THEMATIC analysis ,INTRAVENOUS drug abuse ,DOSAGE forms of drugs ,HEALTH attitudes ,NEEDLE sharing ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK-taking behavior ,PSYCHOLOGY of drug abusers ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Sharing injection equipment remains an important rout of transmission of HIV and HCV infections in the region of Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Tajikistan is one of the most affected countries with high rates of injection drug use and related epidemics.The aim of this qualitative study was to describe drug use practices and related behaviors in two Tajik cities - Kulob and Khorog.Methods: Twelve focus group discussions (6 per city) with 100 people who inject drugs recruited through needle and syringe program (NSP) outreach in May 2014. Topics covered included specific drugs injected, drug prices and purity, access to sterile equipment, safe injection practices and types of syringes and needles used. Qualitative thematic analysis was performed using NVivo 10 software.Results: All participants were male and ranged in age from 20 to 78 years. Thematic analysis showed that cheap Afghan heroin, often adulterated by dealers with other admixtures, was the only drug injected. Drug injectors often added Dimedrol (Diphenhydramine) to increase the potency of "low quality" heroin. NSPs were a major source of sterile equipment. Very few participants report direct sharing of needles and syringes. Conversely, many participants reported preparing drugs jointly and sharing injection paraphernalia. Using drugs in an outdoor setting and experiencing withdrawal were major contributors to sharing equipment, using non-sterile water, not boiling and not filtering the drug solution.Conclusion: Qualitative research can provide insights into risk behaviors that may be missed in quantitative studies. These finding have important implications for planning risk reduction interventions in Tajikistan. Prevention should specifically focus on indirect sharing practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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4. Feasibility and initial efficacy of a culturally sensitive women-centered substance use intervention in Georgia: Sex risk outcomes.
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Jones, Hendrée E., Kirtadze, Irma, Otiashvili, David, Murphy, Keryn, O'Grady, Kevin E., Zule, William, Krupitsky, Evgeny, and Wechsberg, Wendee M.
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FEASIBILITY studies , *SEX customs , *WOMEN'S sexual behavior , *MENTAL health , *UNSAFE sex , *GENETICS , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SUBSTANCE abuse treatment , *INTRAVENOUS drug abuse , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONDOMS , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RESEARCH , *TRANSCULTURAL medical care , *PILOT projects , *EVALUATION research , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *SOCIAL services case management , *THERAPEUTICS ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Background: This paper reports on the feasibility and initial efficacy of a culturally sensitive, comprehensive women-centered substance use intervention for women who inject drugs in Georgia in terms of the primary and secondary sex risk outcomes. The hypothesis under examination was that, relative to case management participants, participants in a culturally sensitive, comprehensive women-specific and -centered intervention would, on average, show significant decreases in past-30-day frequency of unprotected sex, unprotected sex at the last sexual encounter, and increases in condom use and safer sex actions.Methods: The study was a two-arm randomized trial, in which 173 potentially eligible women were screened, and those 128 women determined to be eligible were assigned at random to either Reinforcement-based Treatment plus Women's Co-Op (RBT + WC) or case management (CM). RBT + WC participants received 12 sessions of a structured intervention with the goal of reducing risky sex and substance use and improving physical and mental health. CM participants received 12 sessions of case management and informational brochures that focused on the same issues on which RBT + WC focused. Participants were assessed at baseline, post-treatment, and 3 months following treatment enrollment.Results: Analyses revealed case management having significantly overall higher Safer Sex action scores than RBT + WC, and a significant decrease over time for past 30-day number of unprotected sex acts. Unprotected sex at the last encounter and Condom Use action scores were nonsignificant.Conclusions: Women who inject drugs in Georgia are engaging in risky sexual practices, and are in need of an intervention that addresses these risky behaviors. Reasons for the failure to find differences between a culturally sensitive, comprehensive women-centered intervention and case management tailored to the needs of women who inject drugs in Georgia may have been the result of inadequate power to detect an effect in a sample whose drug use was not as serious as warranted by the intervention. (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01331460 ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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5. Women Who Inject Drugs in the Republic of Georgia: In Their Own Words.
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Kirtadze, Irma, Otiashvili, David, O'Grady, Kevin, Zule, William, Krupitsky, Evgeny, Wechsberg, Wendee, and Jones, Hendrée
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DRUG abuse , *INJECTIONS , *WOMEN'S attitudes , *INTERVIEWING - Abstract
This study describes the initiation and maintenance of illicit drug use, risky behaviors, and the substance use treatment experiences of women in Georgia. Qualitative interviews with 55 drug-using women (mean age 36 years; SD = 9.52), were conducted during April–September 2011. Participants presented diverse histories of drug use initiation and substance use, risky behaviors, and drug treatment participation. All participants reported concurrent use of different substances, including home-produced injection preparations. Women described their experiences of both the positive and negative effects (physical and psychological) that they attributed to their use of drugs. Findings enrich our understanding of the environment in which substance use is initiated and maintained in a female population in Georgia, and illustrate the importance of culture and the role of social factors in the development of injection drug use. Results can provide direction for tailoring the development of interventions for substance use disorders, public policy discussions regarding the treatment of women who use drugs, and future research on substance use among women in Georgia and other post-Soviet nations. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2015
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6. Twice Stigmatized: Provider's Perspectives on Drug-Using Women in the Republic of Georgia.
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Kirtadze, Irma, Otiashvili, David, O'Grady, KevinE., Zule, William, Krupitsky, Evgeny, Ph.D., WendeeM., and Jones, HendréeE.
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DRUG addiction , *PUBLIC health , *WOMEN with drug addiction , *WOMEN & drugs - Abstract
This study examined attitudes and perspectives of 34 health service providers through in-depth interviews in the Republic of Georgia who encountered an injection drug-using woman at least once in the past two months. Most participants' concept of drug dependence treatment was detoxification, as medication-assisted therapy was considered part of harm reduction, although it was thought to have relatively better treatment outcomes compared to detoxification. Respondents reported that drug dependence in women is much more severe than in men. They also expressed less tolerance towards drug-using women, as most providers view such women as failures as a good mother, wife, or child. Georgian women are twice stigmatized, once by a society that views them as fulfilling only a limited purposeful role and again by their male drug-using counterparts. Further, the vast majority of respondents were unaware of the availability of specific types of drug-treatment services in their city, and even more did not seek connections with other service providers, indicating a lack of linkages between drug-related and other services. The need for women-specific services and a comprehensive network of service linkages for all patients in drug treatment is critical. These public health issues require immediate consideration by policy makers, and swift action to address them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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7. Drug use and HIV risk outcomes in opioid-injecting men in the Republic of Georgia: Behavioral treatment+naltrexone compared to usual care
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Otiashvili, David, Kirtadze, Irma, O’Grady, Kevin E., and Jones, Hendrée E.
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DRUG abuse , *HIV infection risk factors , *NALTREXONE , *CLINICAL trials , *DETOXIFICATION (Alternative medicine) , *OPIOIDS , *MEN -- Substance use - Abstract
Abstract: Background: To test the initial feasibility of a novel 22-week comprehensive intervention pairing behavioral treatment with naltrexone that aimed at engaging, retaining, and treating opioid-injecting men in the Republic of Georgia. Methods: Forty opioid-injecting male and their drug-free female partners participated in a two-group randomized clinical trial at the field site of the Union Alternative Georgia, in Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia. The comprehensive intervention that paired behavioral treatment with naltrexone for the male participants (n =20) included counseling sessions using Motivational Interviewing for both the male participant and the couple, monetary incentives for drug abstinence, and research-supported detoxification followed by naltrexone treatment. Male participants in the usual care condition (n =20) had the opportunity to attend once-a-week individualized education sessions and upon request receive referrals to detoxification programs and aftercare that could or could not have included naltrexone. Outcome measures included entry into inpatient detoxification and naltrexone treatment, urine drug screening, reduction in illicit substance use, use of benzodiazepines, injection of buprenorphine, and needle and syringe sharing. Results: The comprehensive intervention condition showed significantly more weekly urine samples negative for illicit opioids during weeks 1–22 (7.0 vs. 1.4; p <.001) and reported significant declines in use of benzodiazepines and injection of buprenorphine (both ps<.004). Conclusions: The first behavioral treatment randomized clinical trial in the Republic of Georgia found that the use of tailored behavioral therapy paired with naltrexone is both feasible and efficacious for treating drug use and reducing HIV drug-risk behavior in Georgian men. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2012
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