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Young people who inject drugs in India have high<scp>HIV</scp>incidence and behavioural risk: a cross‐sectional study

Authors :
Allison M. McFall
Sion Kim Harris
Sunil S. Solomon
Shruti H. Mehta
Lakshmi Ganapathi
Gregory M. Lucas
Muniratnam S. Kumar
Santhanam Anand
Aylur K. Srikrishnan
Source :
Journal of the International AIDS Society
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Introduction There are limited data on young people who inject drugs (PWID) from low‐ and middle‐income countries where injection drug use remains a key driver of new HIV infections. India has a diverse injection drug use epidemic and estimates suggest that at least half of PWID are ≤30 years of age. We compared injection and sexual risk behaviours and HIV incidence between younger and older PWID and characterized uptake of HIV testing and harm reduction services to inform targeted HIV prevention efforts. Methods We analysed cross‐sectional data from 14,381 PWID recruited from cities in the Northeast and North/Central regions of India in 2013 using respondent driven sampling (RDS). We compared “emerging‐adult” (18 to 24 years, 26% of sample) and “young‐adult” PWID (25 to 30 years, 30% of sample) to older PWID (&gt;30 years, 44% of sample) using logistic regression to evaluate factors associated with three recent risk behaviours: needle‐sharing, multiple sexual partners and unprotected sex. We estimated age‐stratified cross‐sectional HIV incidence using a validated multi‐assay algorithm. Results Compared to older adults, emerging‐adults in the Northeastern states were significantly more likely to share needles (males adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 1.82; females aOR 2.29, p

Details

ISSN :
17582652
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the International AIDS Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb8884a4f2139058474aee912b59a787