Yale University

Substance Use Patterns of HIV-Infected Russian Women with and Without Hepatitis C Virus Co-infection.

TitleSubstance Use Patterns of HIV-Infected Russian Women with and Without Hepatitis C Virus Co-infection.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsBrown, Jennifer L., Ralph J. DiClemente, Jessica M. Sales, Eve S. Rose, Polina Safonova, Olga S. Levina, Nikolay Belyakov, and Vadim V. Rassokhin
JournalAIDS and behavior
Date Published2016 Mar 19
ISSN1573-3254
AbstractIndividuals with HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) co-infection may experience substance use related health complications. This study characterized substance use patterns between HIV/HCV co-infected and HIV mono-infected Russian women. HIV-infected women (N = 247; M age = 30.0) in St. Petersburg, Russia, completed a survey assessing substance use, problematic substance use, and the co-occurrence of substance use and sexual behaviors. Covariate adjusted logistic and linear regression analyses indicated that HIV/HCV co-infected participants (57.1 %) reported more lifetime drug use (e.g., heroin: AOR: 13.2, 95 % CI 4.9, 35.3, p < .001), problem drinking (β = 1.2, p = .05), substance use problems (β = 1.3, p = .009), and increased likelihood of past injection drug use (AOR: 26.4, 95 % CI 8.5, 81.9, p < .001) relative to HIV mono-infected individuals. HIV/HCV co-infection was prevalent and associated with increased substance use and problematic drug use. Findings highlight the need for ongoing substance use and HIV/HCV risk behavior assessment and treatment among HIV/HCV co-infected Russian women.
Alternate JournalAIDS Behav

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