Social-spatial network structures among young urban and suburban persons who inject drugs in a large metropolitan area
Social-spatial network structures among young urban and suburban persons who inject drugs in a large metropolitan area
Abstract BackgroundIt is estimated that there are 1.5% US adult population who inject drugs in 2018, with young adults aged 18-39 showing the highest prevalence. PWID are at a high risk of many blood-borne infections. Recent studies have highlight the importance of employing the syndemic approach to study opioid misuse, overdose, HCV and HIV, along with the social and environmental contexts where these interrelated epidemics occur in already marginalized communities. Social interactions and spatial contexts are important structural factors that are understudied. MethodsEgocentric injection network and geographic activity spaces for young (aged 18-30) PWID and their injection, sexual, and social support network members (i.e., where reside, inject drugs, purchase drugs, and meet sex partners) were examined using baseline data from an ongoing longitudinal study (n=258). Participants were stratified based on the location of all place(s) of residence in the past year i.e., urban, suburban, and transient (both urban and suburban) to i) elucidate geospatial concentration of risk activities within multi-dimensional risk environments based on kernel density estimates; and ii) examine spatialized social networks for each residential group. ResultsParticipants were mostly non-Hispanic white (59%); 42% were urban residents, 28% suburban, and 30% transient. We identified a spatial area with concentrated risky activities for each residence group on the West side of Chicago where a large outdoor drug market area is located. The urban group (80%) reported a smaller concentrated area (14 census tracts) compared to the transient (93%) and suburban (91%) with 30 and 51 tracts, respectively. Compared to other areas in Chicago, the identified area had significantly higher neighborhood disadvantages (e.g., higher poverty rate, p<0.001). Significant (p<0.01 for all) differences were observed in social network structures: suburban had the most homogenous network in terms of age and residence, transient participants had the largest network (degree) and more non-redundant connections. ConclusionWe identified concentrated risk activity spaces among PWID from urban, suburban, and transient groups in a large outdoor urban drug market area, which highlights the need for considering the role of risk spaces and social networks in addressing the syndemics in PWID populations.
Pineros Juliet、Latkin Carl、Williams Leslie D.、Lin Qinyun、Boodram Basmattee、Kolak Marynia、Rojas Aguilera Javier Andres、Mackesy-Amiti Mary Ellen
Division of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at ChicagoDepartment of Health, Behavior, and Society, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins UniversityDivision of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at ChicagoSchool of Public Health and Community Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of GothenburgDivision of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at ChicagoDepartment of Geography and GIScience, University of IllinoisCenter for Spatial Data Science, University of ChicagoDivision of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago
医学研究方法预防医学皮肤病学、性病学
injection drug userisk activity spacesocial networkneighborhood disadvantage
Pineros Juliet,Latkin Carl,Williams Leslie D.,Lin Qinyun,Boodram Basmattee,Kolak Marynia,Rojas Aguilera Javier Andres,Mackesy-Amiti Mary Ellen.Social-spatial network structures among young urban and suburban persons who inject drugs in a large metropolitan area[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-02].https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.02.21.23286255.点此复制
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