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Syndemic factors associated with non-fatal overdose among young opioid users in New York City

Guarino, Honoria; Frank, David; Quinn, Kelly; Kim, Dongah; Gile, Krista; Ruggles, Kelly; Friedman, Samuel R; Mateu-Gelabert, Pedro
INTRODUCTION:Rates of illicit opioid use are particularly high among young adults, yet research on overdose experience and factors associated with overdose in this population remains limited. This study examines the experiences and correlates of non-fatal overdose among young adults using illicit opioids in New York City (NYC). METHODS:539 participants were recruited via Respondent-Driven Sampling in 2014-2016. Eligibility criteria included: aged 18-29 years old; current residence in NYC; and nonmedical prescription opioid (PO) use and/or heroin use in the past 30 days. Participants completed structured interviews to assess their socio-demographics, drug use trajectories, current substance use and lifetime and most recent overdose experiences, and were tested on-site for hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies. RESULTS:43.9% of participants reported lifetime overdose experience; of these, 58.8% had experienced two or more overdose events. The majority of participants' most recent overdoses (63.5%) were due to polysubstance use. In bivariable analyses, after RDS adjustment, having ever overdosed was correlated with: household income of >$100,00 growing up (vs. $51,000-100,000); lifetime homelessness; HCV antibody-positive status; lifetime engagement in regular nonmedical benzodiazepine use, regular heroin injection and regular PO injection; and using a non-sterile syringe in the past 12 months. Multivariable logistic regression identified childhood household income >$100,00 (AOR=1.88), HCV-positive status (AOR=2.64), benzodiazepine use (AOR=2.15), PO injection (AOR=1.96) and non-sterile syringe use (AOR=1.70) as significant independent correlates of lifetime overdose. A multivariable model with multiple overdoses (vs. one) found only lifetime regular heroin use and PO injection to be strong correlates. DISCUSSION:Results indicate a high prevalence of lifetime and repeated overdose among opioid-using young adults in NYC, highlighting a need for intensified overdose prevention efforts for this population. The strong associations of HCV and indices of polydrug use with overdose suggest that prevention efforts should address the complex risk environment in which overdose occurs, attending to the overlapping nature of disease-related risk behavior and overdose risk behavior among young people who inject opioids. Overdose prevention efforts tailored for this group may find it useful to adopt a syndemic conception of overdose that understands such events as resulting from multiple, and often interrelated, risk factors.
PMCID:10332320
PMID: 37435512
ISSN: 2296-2565
CID: 5537062

Erato-cism -- I stood outside -- Lot's Wife adrift in the Coronaverse -- Coronaville ya-ya-ya -- What's her name...? -- [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016461
ISSN: 0273-303x
CID: 5417482

fluctuating tides [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016435
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5415192

It's over [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016436
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5415202

Pandemic pleasures [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016437
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5415212

When will we ever learn? [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016440
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5415242

Was I a recruiter for Don Quixote? [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016465
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5417522

Spillover benefit of pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV prevention: evaluating the importance of effect modification using an agent-based model

Buchanan, Ashley L; Park, Carolyn J; Bessey, Sam; Goedel, William C; Murray, Eleanor J; Friedman, Samuel R; Halloran, M Elizabeth; Katenka, Natallia V; Marshall, Brandon D L
We developed an agent-based model using a trial emulation approach to quantify effect measure modification of spillover effects of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV among men who have sex with men (MSM) in the Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell metropolitan area, Georgia. PrEP may impact not only the individual prescribed, but also their partners and beyond, known as spillover. We simulated a two-stage randomised trial with eligible components (≥3 agents with ≥1 HIV+ agent) first randomised to intervention or control (no PrEP). Within intervention components, agents were randomised to PrEP with coverage of 70%, providing insight into a high PrEP coverage strategy. We evaluated effect modification by component-level characteristics and estimated spillover effects on HIV incidence using an extension of randomisation-based estimators. We observed an attenuation of the spillover effect when agents were in components with a higher prevalence of either drug use or bridging potential (if an agent acts as a mediator between ≥2 connected groups of agents). The estimated spillover effects were larger in magnitude among components with either higher HIV prevalence or greater density (number of existing partnerships compared to all possible partnerships). Consideration of effect modification is important when evaluating the spillover of PrEP among MSM.
PMID: 36305040
ISSN: 1469-4409
CID: 5371372

"As Putin and Biden bluster threats of war, and so-called antiwar activists echo imperial lies…" [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
"
ORIGINAL:0016463
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5417502

A Precious Residue : Poems that ponder efforts to spark a working class socialism in the 1970s and after [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
"
ORIGINAL:0016431
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5412632