Abstract

BackgroundInjecting drug use (IDU) is a key driver of the HIV epidemic particularly when individuals experience psychosocial conditions and risky sexual behavior in a syndemic manner. This study sets out to assess evidence of a syndemic pattern of psychosocial conditions (IDU, depression, intimate partner violence (IPV)) on one the hand and risky sexual behavior on the other while accounting for the socio-economic disadvantage among women who inject drugs (WWID) in low-income urban settings in Kenya.MethodsUsing a cross-sectional study design, this study recruited 306 WWIDs from two sites in Nairobi between January 2017 and July 2017. Multiple methodologies including descriptive analyses of co-occurrences of psychosocial conditions at the individual level, standard logistic regression analyses to examine relationships and interactions within and between psychosocial conditions and risky sexual behavior, and classification trees algorithm for predictive modeling via machine learning were employed.ResultsThe prevalence of the psychosocial conditions was as follows: IDU, 88%; depression, 77.1%; and IPV, 84%. The prevalence of risky sexual behavior was 69.3%. IDU and depression were related to each other (P < 0.05) and each of them with risky sexual behavior (P < 0.05). The highest 2-way and 3-way co-occurrence of conditions were reported in IDU and depression (72%) and in IDU, depression, and risky sexual behavior (62%), respectively, indicating clustering of the conditions at the individual level. Further, each additional psychosocial condition (IDU and depression) was associated with sixfold odds (P = 0.000) of having risky sexual behavior suggesting a dose-response relationship. Logistic regression analyses incorporating multiplicative interactive effects returned three significant variables (P < 0.05): IDU*depression interaction effect, “Age when delivered the first child,” and “Income.” Classification tree modeling represented a 5-level interaction analysis with IDU and depression predicted to have the highest influence on risky sexual behavior.ConclusionFindings provide possible evidence of a syndemic pattern involving IDU, depression, and risky sexual behavior suggesting the need for an integrated approach to the implementation of harm reduction interventions among WWID in low-income urban settings in Kenya. This work highlights the need for further studies to authenticate the findings and to characterize pathways in the syndemic development in WWID.

Highlights

  • Injecting drug use (IDU) is a key driver of the HIV epidemic when individuals experience psychosocial conditions and risky sexual behavior in a syndemic manner

  • This study found a high prevalence of psychosocial conditions at the individual level with approximately more than two thirds of the studied WWIDS having either of each of the psychosocial conditions (IDU, intimate partner violence (IPV), depression)

  • Further analyses using logistic regression in this study found that depression and IDU interacted multiplicatively to increase the likelihood of risky sexual behavior among women who inject drugs (WWID) in our settings

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Summary

Introduction

Injecting drug use (IDU) is a key driver of the HIV epidemic when individuals experience psychosocial conditions and risky sexual behavior in a syndemic manner. This study sets out to assess evidence of a syndemic pattern of psychosocial conditions (IDU, depression, intimate partner violence (IPV)) on one the hand and risky sexual behavior on the other while accounting for the socio-economic disadvantage among women who inject drugs (WWID) in low-income urban settings in Kenya. Given that injecting drug use (IDU) is a key driver of HIV epidemic through risky sexual behavior and use of contaminated injection tools [1], the majority of an estimated 3.8 million women and girls who inject drugs (WWIDs) globally are at risk of contracting HIV [2] Among these WWIDs, certain psychosocial conditions including intimate partner violence (IPV) and depression co-occur within them leading to increased rates of risky sexual behavior and subsequent HIV transmission [3, 4]. The syndemic approach postulates that a common cause, such as low socio-economic disadvantage, underlies a syndemic [11]

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