THE RELEVANCE OF DRUG INJECTORS SOCIAL AND RISK NETWORKS FOR UNDERSTANDING AND PREVENTING HIV-INFECTION

被引:214
|
作者
NEAIGUS, A
FRIEDMAN, SR
CURTIS, R
JARLAIS, DCD
FURST, RT
JOSE, B
MOTA, P
STEPHERSON, B
SUFIAN, M
WARD, T
WRIGHT, JW
机构
[1] COLUMBIA UNIV,CTR ADDICT & SUBST ABUSE,NEW YORK,NY 10019
[2] BETH ISRAEL MED CTR,NEW YORK,NY 10016
[3] UNIV ILLINOIS,CHICAGO,IL 60680
[4] CALIF STATE UNIV FULLERTON,FULLERTON,CA 92634
关键词
HIV; AIDS; DRUG INJECTORS; RISK NETWORKS; SOCIAL NETWORKS; NETWORKS; INJECTING DRUG USERS; IDUS;
D O I
10.1016/0277-9536(94)90301-8
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Focusing on the social environment as well as the individual should both enhance our understanding of HIV transmission and assist in the development of more effective prevention programs. Networks are an important aspect of drug injectors' social environment. We distinguish between (1) risk networks (the people among whom HIV risk behaviors occur) as vectors of disease transmission, and (2) social networks (the people among whom there are social interactions with a mutual orientation to one another) as generators and disseminators of social influence. These concepts are applied to analyses of data from interviews with drug injectors in two studies. In the first study drug injectors' risk networks converge with their social networks: 70% inject or share syringes with a spouse or sex partner, a running partner, or with friends or others whom they know. Qualitative data from interviews with injectors in the second study also show that the social relationships between drug injectors and members of their risk network are often based on long-standing and multiplex relationships, such as those based on kinship, friendship, marital and sexual ties, and economic activity. In the first study the vast majority of injectors, over 90%, have social ties with non-injectors. Injectors with more frequent social contacts with non-injectors engage in lower levels of injecting risk behavior. Risk settings may function as risk networks: injectors in this study who inject at shooting galleries are more likely than those who do not to rent used syringes, borrow used syringes and inject with strangers. Since the adoption of a network approach is relatively new, a number of issues require further attention. These include: how to utilize social networks among drug injectors to reduce risk through peer pressure; how to promote risk reduction by encouraging ties between injectors and non-injectors; and how to integrate biographical and historical change into understanding network processes. Appropriate methodologies to study drug injectors' networks should be developed, including techniques to reach hidden populations, computer software for managing and analyzing network data bases, and statistical methods for drawing inferences from data gathered through dependent sampling designs.
引用
收藏
页码:67 / 78
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] HIV-INFECTION - NATURE HISTORY - CLASSIFICATION, TREATMENT, OCCUPATIONAL RISK
    BOUVET, E
    ANNALES DE CHIRURGIE, 1992, 46 (06): : 471 - 475
  • [32] Specific concepts of care for pregnant women with drug addiction or HIV-infection
    Kästner, R
    Hartl, K
    Knobbe, A
    Grubert, TA
    Stauber, M
    ZENTRALBLATT FUR GYNAKOLOGIE, 2001, 123 (01): : 48 - 50
  • [33] COMPARISON OF CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS OF HIV-INFECTION BETWEEN MALE AND FEMALE INJECTING DRUG-USERS
    VLAHOV, D
    MUNOZ, A
    SOLOMON, L
    ASTEMBORSKI, J
    LINDSAY, A
    ANDERSON, J
    GALAI, N
    NELSON, KE
    AIDS, 1994, 8 (06) : 819 - 823
  • [34] HIV-infection and the HIV-infected: peculiarities of social perceptions in two age groups
    Bovina, I. B.
    Panova, T. B.
    Malysheva, N. G.
    PSYCHOLOGY AND LAW, 2012, (01):
  • [35] Assessing the influence of need to inject and drug withdrawal on drug injectors' perceptions of HIV risk behavior
    Hughes, RA
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS, 2001, 33 (02) : 185 - 189
  • [36] HIV-INFECTION AND AIDS RISK BEHAVIORS AMONG INJECTING DRUG-USERS ENTERING METHADONE TREATMENT - AN UPDATE
    BATTJES, RJ
    PICKENS, RW
    BROWN, LS
    JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES AND HUMAN RETROVIROLOGY, 1995, 10 (01): : 90 - 96
  • [37] Role of protease inhibitors in preventing recurrent oral candidosis in patients with HIV-infection: A prospective case-control study
    Cauda, R
    Tacconelli, E
    Tumbarello, M
    Morace, G
    De Bernardis, F
    Torosantucci, A
    Cassone, A
    JOURNAL OF ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROMES, 1999, 21 (01): : 20 - 25
  • [38] DISTRIBUTION OF HIV AND ACUTE HEPATITIS-B INFECTION AMONG DRUG INJECTORS IN GLASGOW
    GRUER, LD
    PEEDLE, M
    CARRINGTON, D
    CLEMENTS, GB
    FOLLETT, EA
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STD & AIDS, 1991, 2 (05) : 356 - 358
  • [39] SEXUAL BEHAVIORS OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN MALE COLLEGE-STUDENTS AND THE RISK OF HIV-INFECTION
    JOHNSON, RL
    DOUGLAS, W
    NELSON, A
    JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1992, 84 (10) : 864 - 868
  • [40] Mathematical model of HIV-infection transmission and dynamics in the size of risk groups
    Nosova E.A.
    Romanyukha A.A.
    Mathematical Models and Computer Simulations, 2013, 5 (4) : 379 - 393