Implementing an Updated “Break the Cycle” Intervention to Reduce Initiating Persons into Injecting Drug Use in an Eastern European and a US “opioid epidemic” Setting

We tested the hypothesis that an updated “Break the Cycle” (BtC) intervention, based in social cognitive theory and motivational interviewing, would reduce the likelihood that current persons who inject drugs (PWID) would assist persons who do not inject drugs (non-PWID) with first injections in Tal...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS and behavior 2019-09, Vol.23 (9), p.2304-2314
Hauptverfasser: Des Jarlais, Don, Uuskula, Anneli, Talu, Ave, Barnes, David M., Raag, Mait, Arasteh, Kamyar, Org, Greete, Demarest, Donna, Feelemyer, Jonathan, Berg, Hayley, Tross, Susan
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container_end_page 2314
container_issue 9
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container_title AIDS and behavior
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creator Des Jarlais, Don
Uuskula, Anneli
Talu, Ave
Barnes, David M.
Raag, Mait
Arasteh, Kamyar
Org, Greete
Demarest, Donna
Feelemyer, Jonathan
Berg, Hayley
Tross, Susan
description We tested the hypothesis that an updated “Break the Cycle” (BtC) intervention, based in social cognitive theory and motivational interviewing, would reduce the likelihood that current persons who inject drugs (PWID) would assist persons who do not inject drugs (non-PWID) with first injections in Tallinn, Estonia and Staten Island, New York City. 402 PWID were recruited, a baseline interview covering demographics, drug use, and assisting non-PWID with first drug injections was administered, followed by BtC intervention. 296 follow-up interviews were conducted 6 months post-intervention. Percentages assisting with first injections declined from 4.7 to 1.3% (73% reduction) in Tallinn (p 
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10461-019-02467-y
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Percentages assisting with first injections declined from 4.7 to 1.3% (73% reduction) in Tallinn (p &lt; 0.02), and from 15 to 6% (60% reduction) in Staten Island (p &lt; 0.05). Persons assisted with first injections declined from 11 to 3 in Tallinn (p = 0.02) and from 32 to 13 in Staten Island. (p = 0.024). 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source Sociological Abstracts; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Cognitive ability
Demographics
Demography
Drug abuse
Drug use
Epidemics
Health Psychology
HIV
Human immunodeficiency virus
Infectious Diseases
Intervention
Interviews
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Motivation
Narcotics
Opioids
Original Paper
Public Health
Reduction
title Implementing an Updated “Break the Cycle” Intervention to Reduce Initiating Persons into Injecting Drug Use in an Eastern European and a US “opioid epidemic” Setting
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