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Collective organisation of injecting: drug users and the struggle against AIDS

Chapter by: Jose, Benny; Friedman, Samuel R; Neaigus, Alan; Curtis, Richard; Sufian, Meryl; Stepherson, Bruce; Des Jarlais, Don C
in: AIDS, Drugs and Prevention : Perspectives on Individual and Community Action by Hartnoll, Richard; Rhodes, Tim (Eds)
London : Taylor & Francis, 2002
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 9780415102032
CID: 4848342

Strategies for working with injecting drug users: the role of health psychologists in harm reduction

Chapter by: Des Jarlais, Don C; Friedman, Samuel R
in: Innovative approaches to health psychology : prevention and treatment lessons from AIDS by Chesney, Margaret A; Antoni, Michael H (Eds)
Washington, D.C. : American Psychological Association, 2002
pp. 97-114
ISBN: 9781557989130
CID: 4851492

What risk networks and social networks can contribute to understanding and preventing the potential spread of HIV

Friedman, Samuel R; Neaigus, Alan; Sandoval, Milagros; Mateu-Gelabert, Pedro; Flom, Peter L; Kottiri, Benny Jose; Krauss, Beatrice; Maslow, Carey; Fuld, Jennifer; Des Jarlais, Don C
ORIGINAL:0015057
ISSN: n/a
CID: 4858582

Poems [Poem]

Friedman, Samuel
ORIGINAL:0015135
ISSN: 0954-0121
CID: 4882702

To science in the age of AIDS [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0015166
ISSN: 1043-1268
CID: 4900462

Holy NASEC, April 28, 2001 [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0015165
ISSN: 1043-1268
CID: 4900452

Residential status and HIV risk behaviors among Puerto Rican drug injectors in New York and Puerto Rico

Andia, J F; Deren, S; Kang, S Y; Robles, R R; Colon, H M; Oliver-Velez, D; Finlinson, A; Beardsley, M; Friedman, S R
This article investigates the association between residential status and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) risk behaviors among island and New York Puerto Rican injection drug users (IDUs). We assigned 561 subjects from New York City and 312 from Puerto Rico to five residential status categories: living in parent's home, living in own home, living in other's home, living in temporary housing (hotel, single-room occupancy [SRO] hotels), and homeless (living in streets/shelters). Dependent variables included injection- and sex-related risk behaviors (sharing syringes, sharing other injection paraphernalia, shooting gallery use, and having paid sex). Chi square, t tests, and multivariate logistic analysis tests were performed separately by site. About one-quarter of the sample in each site was homeless. Island Puerto Ricans were more likely to live with their parents (44% vs. 12%, p < .001), and more New York IDUs lived in their own home (30% vs. 14%, p < .001). In New York, gallery use and paid sex were associated with living in other's home, living in parent's home, and being homeless. Sharing paraphernalia was related to living in other's home, living in temporary housing, and being homeless. In Puerto Rico, having paid sex was associated with homelessness. High-risk behaviors were more likely among homeless IDUs in both sites. Programs to provide housing and target outreach and other prevention programs for homeless IDUs would be helpful in reducing HIV risk.
PMID: 11727885
ISSN: 0095-2990
CID: 1577182

Prevalence and correlates of anal sex with men among young adult women in an inner city minority neighborhood

Friedman, S R; Flom, P L; Kottiri, B J; Neaigus, A; Sandoval, M; Curtis, R; Zenilman, J M; Des Jarlais, D C
In a population-representative sample of 202 18-24-year-old women in a neighborhood with widespread injection of drugs and HIV, 14% reported unprotected anal sex with men in the past year. Independent significant predictors were illegal drug use, having a main partner who takes the lead in deciding what to do during sex, and less self-deception. Having ever had anal sex was associated with having ever been infected with hepatitis B.
PMID: 11600841
ISSN: 0269-9370
CID: 3601872

Stigmatized drug use, sexual partner concurrency, and other sex risk network and behavior characteristics of 18- to 24-year-old youth in a high-risk neighborhood

Flom, P L; Friedman, S R; Kottiri, B J; Neaigus, A; Curtis, R; Des Jarlais, D C; Sandoval, M; Zenilman, J M
BACKGROUND:Sex risks and drug use are related. This relation in youth is described. GOAL/OBJECTIVE:To determine how stigmatized drug use is related to sexual risk behaviors and network characteristics among youth. STUDY DESIGN/METHODS:In-person interviews were conducted with both a probability household sample (n = 363) and a targeted, street-recruited sample of cocaine, heroin, crack, or injected drug users (n - 165) comprising 18- to 24-year-olds in an inner city neighborhood. Drug use in the preceding 12 months was scaled hierarchically, lowest to highest social stigma, as none, marijuana, noninjected cocaine, noninjected heroin, crack, and injected drugs. RESULTS:Users of the more stigmatized drugs had more sex partners. They were more likely to report a history of concurrent sex partners, sex with someone who also had engaged in sex with a network member, commercial sex work, and unprotected sex. Findings showed crack use and drug injection to be associated more strongly with increased sex risk among women than among men. CONCLUSIONS:Young users of the more stigmatized drugs are at much greater network and behavior risk for sexually transmitted diseases. Drug use prevention, harm reduction interventions, or both may lower this risk.
PMID: 11689758
ISSN: 0148-5717
CID: 3601902

Social networks, risk-potential networks, health, and disease

Friedman, S R; Aral, S
PMCID:3455917
PMID: 11564845
ISSN: 1099-3460
CID: 4842062