Young and invisible: a qualitative study of service engagement by people who inject drugs in India

Author:

Ganapathi LakshmiORCID,Srikrishnan Aylur K,Martinez Clarissa,Lucas Gregory M,Mehta Shruti H,Verma Vinita,McFall Allison M,Mayer Kenneth H,Hassan Areej,Rajan Shobini,O’Cleirigh Conall,Harris Sion Kim,Solomon Sunil S

Abstract

ObjectivesThe HIV epidemic in India is concentrated in key populations such as people who inject drugs (PWID). New HIV infections are high among young PWID (≤30 years of age), who are hard to engage in services. We assessed perspectives of young PWID to guide development of youth-specific services.SettingWe conducted focus group discussions (FGDs) with PWID and staff at venues offering services to PWID in three Indian cities representing historical and emerging drug use epidemics.ParticipantsPWID were eligible to participate if they were between 18 and 35 years, had initiated injection as adolescents or young adults and knew adolescent PWID in their networks. 43 PWID (81% male, 19% female) and 10 staff members participated in FGDs. A semistructured interview guide was used to elicit participants’ narratives on injection initiation experiences, barriers to seeking harm reduction services, service delivery gaps and recommendations to promote engagement. Thematic analysis was used to develop an explanatory model for service engagement in each temporal stage across the injection continuum.ResultsInjection initiation followed non-injection opioid dependence. Lack of services for non-injection opioid dependence was a key gap in the preinjection initiation phase. Lack of knowledge and reliance on informal sources for injecting equipment were key reasons for non-engagement in the peri-injection phase. Additionally, low-risk perception resulted in low motivation to seek services. Psychosocial and structural factors shaped engagement after established injection. Housing and food insecurity, and stigma disproportionately affected female PWID while lack of confidential adolescent friendly services impeded engagement by adolescent PWID.ConclusionsDevelopment of youth-specific services for young PWID in India will need to address unique vulnerabilities and service gaps along each stage of the injection continuum. Scaling-up of tailored services is needed for young female PWID and adolescents, including interventions that prevent injection initiation and provision of confidential harm reduction services.

Funder

The Johns Hopkins University Center for AIDS Research

Career Development Fellowship, Boston Children's Hospital

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

The Aerosmith Research Endowment Fund, Boston Children's Hospital

The Elton John AIDS Foundation

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Harvard University Center for AIDS Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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