Abstract

Background: Sociodemographic factors have an impact worldwide on the behavior of people who use drugs (PWUD). This study attempts to clarify the sociodemographic factors related to HIV/HCV high-risk behaviors (injection drug use, syringe sharing, and multiple sex partners) among PWUD on methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) in the long term.Methods: The 13,300 PWUD recruited into the MMT program were followed during 2006–2015. Generalized estimating equations were used to examine the relationship between sociodemographic characteristics and HIV/HCV high-risk behaviors.Results: We found that male (vs. female), living alone (vs. living with family or relatives), temporary income, financial support from family/friends, and financial support from social welfare (vs. regular salary) were positively associated with injection drug use. Age of initial drug use was negatively associated with injection drug use and syringe sharing. For both genders, being unmarried (vs. married or in cohabitation), living with friends, living alone (vs. living with family or relatives), temporary income, financial supports from family/friends (vs. regular salary), being employed (vs. unemployed/between jobs) was positively associated. In contrast, age at baseline was negatively associated with having multiple sexual partners for both genders. Ethnic of non-Han (vs. Han) was positively associated with having multiple sexual partners simply for males. Being divorced or widowed (vs. married or cohabitated) was positively associated with having multiple sexual partners merely for females.Conclusion: HIV/HCV high-risk behaviors correlated with certain sociodemographic factors of PWUD receiving MMT. There is a need for improving the well-being, employment, and housing status of PWUD on MMT to reduce their HIV/HCV risk behaviors.

Highlights

  • Drug abuse is a critical public health problem worldwide

  • Between 2006 and 2015, a total of 13,300 people who use drugs (PWUD) participated in the Wuhan maintenance treatment (MMT) program

  • Our data revealed several sociodemographic factors related to HIV/HCV high-risk behaviors in PWUD on MMT

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Summary

Introduction

Drug abuse is a critical public health problem worldwide. According to the World Drug Report 2020, an estimated 269 million people (5.3% of the global population aged 15–64) had used drugs, with 58 million people in the world had used opioids in 2018. A study using a calibrated model based on Monte Carlo simulations estimated those entire drug users increased from 0.86 million to more than 3.12 million from 2000 to 2030 [4]. A modeling study estimated that HIV and HCV prevalence expected to increase, respectively, from 10.9 and 61.7 to 19.0 and 69.1% among people using polydrugs (using synthetic drugs and heroin concurrently) from 2005 to 2035 [6]. Sociodemographic factors have an impact worldwide on the behavior of people who use drugs (PWUD). This study attempts to clarify the sociodemographic factors related to HIV/HCV high-risk behaviors (injection drug use, syringe sharing, and multiple sex partners) among PWUD on methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) in the long term

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