Publication | Closed Access
Knowledge of status and assessment of personal health consequences with hepatitis C are not enough to change risk behaviour among injecting drug users in Stockholm County, Sweden
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Citations
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References
2009
Year
Hcv Status UnknownSubstance UseVaccine HesitancyDrug AssessmentHarm ReductionLogistic AnalysisHcv StatusPreventive MedicineViral HepatitisHealth CommunicationClinical EpidemiologyPublic Health PracticePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchPersonal Health ConsequencesInfectious Disease PreventionRisk PerceptionDisease Risk AssessmentClinical SafetyDisease PreventionRiskStockholm CountyEpidemiologySubstance AbuseHepatitis CTreatment And PreventionAddictionPatient SafetyInternational HealthHepatitisMedicinePharmacoepidemiology
This was a multicentre study with risk perception as the theoretical framework, investigating if risk behaviours change when injecting drug users (IDUs) are aware of their hepatitis C virus (HCV) status and had assessed the health consequences with HCV infection. Two hundred and thirteen participants aged 15–40 y were analysed. Sharing of needles and of other injecting equipment were common both among participants who reported HCV-positive status (74%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 65.3–80.1%) and among those who reported HCV status unknown (68%, 95% CI 56.0–78.4%). Participants associating very severe health consequences with HCV infection and those who did not know of any health consequences with HCV infection shared needles at almost the same rate (78%, 95% CI 62.5–87.7 vs 69%, 95% CI 8.0–78.9, respectively). Sharing of other injecting equipment was most common among participants with verified HCV-positive status (adjusted risk ratio 5.64, 95% CI 2.64–12.07). Knowledge of HCV status and assessment of health consequences with HCV infection were not enough to change injecting risk behaviours. Sharing of other injecting equipment was a more important risk factor than sharing needles for participants with verified HCV-positive status. It is suggested that professionals engage IDUs in risk analysis and open a dialogue about assessment in order to identify, quantify and characterize risks.
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