Lifetime correlates associated with amphetamine use among northern Thai men attending STD and HIV anonymous test sites
Aims : To investigate the demographic, sexual, and other substance use risk correlates of amphetamine use among men in northern Thailand prior to the current epidemic of amphetamine use in the Kingdom. Design: Cross-sectional quantitative behavioral questionnaires. Setting: Thai Ministry of Health S...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Drug and alcohol dependence 2002-12, Vol.68 (3), p.245-253 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Aims
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To investigate the demographic, sexual, and other substance use risk correlates of amphetamine use among men in northern Thailand prior to the current epidemic of amphetamine use in the Kingdom.
Design: Cross-sectional quantitative behavioral questionnaires.
Setting: Thai Ministry of Health STD and HIV Anonymous Test Sites in the upper northern provinces of Chiang Mai and Lamphun.
Participants: Adult Thai men recruited at clinics for enrollment in an HIV seroincidence cohort study (The Thai HIVNET). All men were HIV negative at enrollment, and had at least one self-reported sexual risk for HIV infection (a recent STD, use of sex workers, multiple sexual partners, low or absent condom use, sex with men).
Measurements: Participants answered a structured questionnaire.
Findings: Lifetime history of amphetamine use was reported by 133/914 men, 14.5%. Older age was protective for use (odds ratio (OR) 0.5) and use was associated with use of other substances; heroin (OR 7.1), thinner (OR 6.2), opium (OR 5.9), and marijuana (OR 5.7). Several STDs were associated with amphetamine use: gonorrhea (OR 2.3) and genital warts (OR 2.4), and any STD (OR 1.9). In multivariate analysis, use of heroin (OR 3.1), soft drugs (OR 4.9), and a history of gonorrhea (OR 2.0) were independently associated with amphetamine use in northern Thai men.
Conclusions: Associations between young age, gonorrhea, other substance use and amphetamines indicate that prevention measures could occur at STD clinics and be incorporated into school programs when individuals are entering adolescence. |
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ISSN: | 0376-8716 1879-0046 |
DOI: | 10.1016/S0376-8716(02)00218-1 |