Patterns of Substance Use & Correlates of Lifetime & Active Injection Drug Use among Women in Malaysia
BACKGROUND:
While
drug use is associated with HIV risk in Southeast Asia, little is known about
substance use behaviors among women, including drug injection.
OBJECTIVES:
To
describe patterns of substance use among women using alcohol and drugs in
Malaysia and identify correlates of lifetime and active drug injection, a risk
factor for HIV transmission.
METHODS:
A survey
of 103 women who used drugs in the last 12 months assessed drug use history and
frequency, including drug injection and drug use during pregnancy,
self-reported HIV-status, childhood and adulthood physical and sexual abuse,
and access to and utilization of harm reduction services, including
needle-syringe exchange programs (NSEP) and opioid agonist maintenance therapy
(OAT). Principal component analyses (PCA) were conducted to assess drug use
grouping.
RESULTS:
Amphetamine-type
substances (ATS; 82.5%), alcohol (75.7%) and heroin (71.8%) were the most
commonly used drugs across the lifetime. Drug injection was reported by 32.0%
(n = 33) of participants with 21.4% (n = 22) having injected in the last 30
days. PCA identified two groups of drug users: opioids/benzodiazepines and club
drugs. Lifetime drug injection was significantly associated with lower
education,homelessness, prior criminal justice involvement,
opioid use, polysubstance use, childhood physical and sexual abuse, and being
HIV-infected, but not with prior OAT.
CONCLUSION:
Women
who use drugs in Malaysia report high levels of polysubstance use and
injection-related risk behaviors, including sharing of injection equipment and
being injected by others. Low OAT utilization suggests the need for improved
access to OAT services and other harm reduction measures that prioritize women.
By: Wickersham JA1,2, Loeliger KB1,3, Marcus R1, Pillai V2, Kamarulzaman A1,2, Altice FL1,3,2.
- 1 Yale University School of Medicine , Department of Internal Medicine, Infectious Diseases Section, AIDS Program , New Haven , CT , USA.
- 2 University of Malaya, Centre of Excellence for Research in AIDS , Kuala Lumpur , Malaysia.
- 3 Yale University School of Public Health , Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases , New Haven , CT , USA.
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