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RESEARCH |
Karen H. Seal, Alex H. Kral, Lauren Gee, Lisa D. Moore, Jennifer Lorvick, and Brian R. Edlin are with the Urban Health Study, Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of California, San Francisco. Lisa D. Moore is also with the Department of Health Education, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, Calif. Ricky N. Bluthenthal is with the Drug Policy Research Center and Health Program, RAND, and the Department of Psychiatry, Charles R. Drew University, Los Angeles, Calif.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Karen H. Seal, MD, MPH, Urban Health Study, 3180 18th St, Suite 302, San Francisco, CA 94110 (e-mail: karens{at}itsa.ucsf.edu).
| ABSTRACT |
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Objectives. This study sought to determine prevalence of and risk factors for nonfatal recent overdose among street-recruited injection heroin users.
Methods. From August 1998 through July 1999, 1427 heroin injectors were recruited from 6 inner-city neighborhoods in the San Francisco Bay Area, Calif, and interviewed. Factors hypothesized to be associated with recent overdose were analyzed with logistic regression.
Results. Of the 1427 participants, 684 (48%) had had an overdose, 466 (33%) had experienced 2 or more overdose events, and 182 (13%) had had a recent overdose. In multiple logistic regression, being younger (adjusted odds ratio [OR] for each year of increasing age = 0.95; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.94, 0.97), having been arrested 3 or more times in the past year (adjusted OR = 2.50; 95% CI = 1.61, 3.87), drinking 4 or more alcoholic drinks per day (adjusted OR = 2.05; 95% CI = 1.37, 3.05), and having participated in methadone detoxification during the past year (adjusted OR = 1.47; 95% CI = 1.03, 2.09) were independently associated with recent overdose. Being homeless; identifying as gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgender; having spent 5 or more years in prison or jail; and having engaged in sex work also were associated with recent overdose.
Conclusions. Targeted interventions that decrease risk for overdose are urgently needed.
| INTRODUCTION |
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Several studies have identified factors associated with overdose.811 Overdose is more prevalent after a period of abstinence, when tolerance is lowered, such as following release from jail or drug treatment programs.8,9 The risk of overdose is greater when heroin is injected while other central nervous system depressants, such as alcohol or sedatives, are being used.8,10,1214 Moreover, the potency of heroin varies widely, and overdoses have occurred when users altered their source.10,15,16
Those who report a nonfatal overdose in the past are more likely to experience another, potentially fatal overdose in the future.13 Here we report on the prevalence of recent nonfatal overdose among a sample of street-recruited heroin injectors in the San Francisco Bay Area and quantify associated risk factors. Based on our findings, we propose several practical prevention strategies to stem the increasing number of unnecessary heroin overdose deaths.
| METHODS |
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From August 1998 through July 1999, 1622 IDUs were recruited from 6 inner-city communities in the San Francisco Bay Area. Participants were interviewed by trained counselors about demographics and sexual and injection risk behavior, including overdosing, and were paid a small stipend ($15$20) for their contribution to the study. The study was approved by the University of California, San Francisco, Committee on Human Research, and each participant gave informed consent.
For this analysis, we restricted our sample to the 1427 participants who reported injecting heroin or "speedballs" (a cocaine and heroin mixture) in the past 6 months. In a subsequent wave of data collection (October 1999February 2000), a similar population of street-recruited IDUs classified 307 (94%) of 327 overdoses as heroin overdoses. In a smaller follow-up study, 96% defined overdose as "not breathing" and "turning blue" and as potentially leading to death, all features of heroin overdose. Thus, we assume that the vast majority of overdoses reported here represented heroin overdoses.
We defined recent nonfatal overdose as a self-reported overdose that occurred in 1998 or 1999. We limited our analysis to recent overdose, because participants would have more accurate recall of the overdose events and self-reported demographic and risk behavior would be concurrent. The follow-up interval from January 1998 to the day of the interview varied from 7 months for persons interviewed in August 1998 to 18 months for participants interviewed in July 1999.
We used logistic regression modeling to examine demographic and injection and sex risk variables individually for their association with recent nonfatal overdose. Odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated. Methadone detoxification refers to treatment for a 21-day period during which the methadone dose is tapered and then discontinued; in methadone maintenance, the client is maintained indefinitely at a prescribed dose.
To determine independent predictors of recent nonfatal overdose, we constructed a multivariate model that used stepwise logistic regression and included variables that were associated (P < .1) with recent overdose in bivariate analysis (see Table 3
) and that we hypothesized might be causally associated with overdose. We also included calendar time in the model to adjust for duration of the follow-up interval for recent overdose. To validate this approach, we performed an intervalcensored survival analysis (SAS LIFEREG procedure21). The hazard ratios in this model were not significantly different from the odds ratios in the logistic model.
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| RESULTS |
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In bivariate analysis, identifying as White or "other" race/ethnicity, being younger, identifying as bisexual, being homeless, and having been arrested 3 or more times in the past year were significantly associated with increased odds of recent overdose (Table 1
), as was having engaged in sex work in the past 6 months (Table 2
). Having participated in methadone maintenance was associated with a decreased odds of recent overdose, whereas having undergone methadone detoxification was associated with an increased odds (Table 1
). Also, in bivariate analysis, having a shorter injection career, reporting 4 or more alcoholic drinks per day, injecting heroin more frequently, and using sedatives were each associated with greater odds of recent overdose (Table 2
). For each additional characteristic a participant reported that was included in the "social marginalization" score, from 0 to 3 or more characteristics, the odds of recent overdose concomitantly increased in a stepwise fashion (P < .001,
2 test for trend) (Table 2
).
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| DISCUSSION |
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In our sample, younger age was independently associated with recent overdose. Recent studies have reported that young injectors (younger than 30 years) have a strikingly high prevalence of overdose (55% have overdosed a median of 3 times)32 and engage in significantly greater injection and sexual risk behavior than their older counterparts33; it has also been shown that these higher-risk behaviors are associated with overdose.32 Thus, health and social service providers who work with young IDUs should emphasize the high risk of overdose and provide practical overdose prevention education.
We, as others, found that when IDUs injected heroin after a period of abstinencewhen their tolerance was lowered, such as following incarceration or 21-day methadone detoxificationthe risk of overdose was higher.9,10,16 Of note, several groups in Europe, the United Kingdom, and Australia reported that long-term methadone maintenance treatment is protective against heroin overdose.9,31,34 Our findings highlight the critical importance of including overdose prevention education in prerelease programs in jails and 21-day methadone detoxification clinics.
As others have reported, our data showed that factors contributing to central nervous system depression, such as drinking alcohol while injecting heroin, increased the odds of recent overdose.9,10,13,35 Autopsy studies have found that in deaths attributed to "heroin" overdose, opiate levels often were no higher than in those who survived and that death rarely occurred in the absence of other substances.8,36 Thus, prevention education should stress the risk for death when heroin is mixed with central nervous system depressants such as alcohol (and sedatives), because these drugs may promote higher-risk injection behavior and enhance the respiratory depressant effects of heroin.
Characteristics that imply social marginalization have been associated with several adverse health outcomes in other research.2227 In this study, 4 such characteristicsbeing homeless; having been incarcerated; identifying as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender; and engaging in sex workwere independently associated with recent overdose in an increasing stepwise fashion. These factors may increase levels of social and economic stress and reduce opportunities and resources for self-protective behaviors. Heroin injectors who lack a stable social community, a safe and familiar place to inject, and a steady and known supply of heroin may be more likely to inject alone, to rush injections because of fears of arrest, and to experience fluctuating heroin purity and tolerance, all of which may culminate in a greater tendency toward overdose.28,29 Of note, a recent study of a cohort of IDUs from Seattle, Wash, published in this Journal found a significant association between overdose death and factors suggesting social marginalization, namely, identifying as bisexual and being homeless.37
Harm reduction workers in Europe, recognizing the potential for overdose in ever-changing, chaotic injection environments, have developed "safe injection rooms".38 Although safe injection rooms are not currently within the scope of US drug policy, IDUs can be strongly advised to (1) inject a small quantity of unfamiliar heroin first, and more slowly than usual, before using a full dose; (2) inject in safe and familiar locations; and (3) avoid injecting alone. More research is required to better explain why and how overdose may result not only from central nervous system depression and lowered tolerance but also indirectly from a constellation of less well understood social, behavioral, and environmental factors.
Our results should be considered in light of the following limitations. We used targeted sampling techniques to recruit a sample directly from the drug-using population in the San Francisco Bay Area. Nevertheless, this was not a true random sample; therefore, the results cannot be generalized to all heroin injectors. Because of the clandestine nature of drug use, it is not possible to sample drug users at random. Furthermore, there may be inherent biases in self-reported drug use and risk behavior data because of social desirability, recall, and intoxication. Previous research, however, has shown high validity in selfreport among drug users recruited outside clinical settings.39,40 Moreover, we did not specify the type of drug overdose and did not furnish a standard definition of overdose. To address this, we eliminated from the analysis IDUs who had not injected heroin within the past 6 months.
Despite these limitations, we found a strikingly high prevalence of overdose and several modifiable risk factors that suggest several potential lifesaving interventions. We must focus overdose prevention efforts on relatively young injectors and those who are frequently arrested, drink alcohol daily, and participate in 21-day methadone detoxification. Specifically, we should urgently disseminate overdose prevention messages such as avoiding mixing heroin with other central nervous system depressants and exercising caution after periods of abstinence. Finally, in light of the tragic number of unnecessary deaths from overdose, we should seriously consider novel interventions such as "safe injection rooms" and providing resuscitation training and take-home naloxone to injection heroin users.
| Acknowledgments |
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We wish to thank the staff of the Urban Health Study for their help in collecting data and the many participants who shared important information about their lives. This article is dedicated to all who have lost their lives to heroin overdose.
| Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication May 23, 2001.
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