Home > Factors associated with experiencing stigma, discrimination, and negative health care treatment among people who inject drugs.

Broady, Timothy R and Valerio, Heather and Alavi, Maryam and Wheeler, Alice and Silk, David and Martinello, Marianne and Conway, Anna and Milat, Andrew and Dunlop, Adrian and Murray, Carolyn and Henderson, Charles and Amin, Janaki and Read, Phillip and Marks, Philippa and Degenhardt, Louisa and Stevens, Annabelle and Prain, Bianca and Hayllar, Jeremy and Reid, David and Montebello, Mark and Wade, Alexandra and Christmass, Michael and Cock, Victoria and Dore, Gregory J and Treloar, Carla and Grebely, Jason (2024) Factors associated with experiencing stigma, discrimination, and negative health care treatment among people who inject drugs. International Journal of Drug Policy, 128, 104468. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2024.104468.

External website: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/...

INTRODUCTION Stigma has negative consequences for the health of people who inject drugs and people living with hepatitis C virus (HCV). This study evaluated factors associated with stigma related to injecting drug use (IDU) or HCV and those associated with being treated negatively by health workers.

METHODS ETHOS Engage is an observational cohort study of people who inject drugs attending drug treatment clinics and needle and syringe programs in Australia. Participants completed a questionnaire including IDU- and HCV-related stigma, and negative treatment by health workers. Logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with experiencing stigma and negative treatment in a cross-sectional sample.

RESULTS Of 1,211 participants, 31% were women, 64% had injected drugs in the previous month, and 65% had been diagnosed with HCV. IDU-related stigma was reported by 57% of participants and was associated with being a woman, higher than Year 10 education, homelessness, opioid agonist treatment, recent injecting, overdose history, hospitalisation for drug use, and unknown HCV status. HCV-related stigma was reported by 34% of participants diagnosed with HCV and was associated with being a woman, homelessness, receptive needle/syringe sharing, arrest for drug use/possession, and recent HCV testing. Negative treatment from health workers was reported by 45% of participants and was associated with being a woman, receptive needle/syringe sharing, hospitalisation for drug use, and arrest for drug use/possession.

DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS Results highlight important intersections and disparities in stigmatising experiences among people who inject drugs. Considering these intersections can assist health services provide more inclusive care.


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