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  • Water, sanitation and hygie...
    Calderón-Villarreal, Alhelí; Abramovitz, Daniela; Avelar Portillo, Lourdes Johanna; Goldenberg, Shira; Flanigan, Shawn; Quintana, Penelope J.E.; Harvey-Vera, Alicia; Vera, Carlos F.; Rangel, Gudelia; Strathdee, Steffanie A.; Kayser, Georgia L.

    The International journal of drug policy, July 2024, 2024-07-00, 20240701, Letnik: 129
    Journal Article

    People who inject drugs (PWID) are at high risk of developing injection-related infections, including abscesses. Access to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) are key human rights and services; yet these services have been underexplored as predictors of abscesses among PWID. Longitudinal analysis was employed among a cohort of PWID to determine if WASH insecurity (lack of access) was associated with abscess incidence in the Tijuana, Mexico and San Diego, United States metropolitan area during 24-months of follow-up survey data from 2020 to 2023. We calculated abscess prevalence at baseline and tracked the incidence of new abscesses among individuals without an abscess during the previous visit. Time dependent Cox regression modeling was employed with variance clustered by participant to characterize the relationship between WASH insecurity and abscess incidence. At baseline, hand hygiene insecurity, bathing insecurity in the previous six months and open defecation in the last week, were reported by 60 %, 54 % and 38 % of participants, respectively; 21 % reported an abscess in the last six months. The incidence of abscesses was 24.4 (95 %CI: 21.1–27.6) per 100 person-years. After adjusting for covariates, the hazard of developing an abscess remained significantly elevated among individuals using non-improved (with risk of contamination) water sources (e.g., surface water) for preparing drugs (adjusted HR adjHR: 1.49 95 %CI: 1.01–2.21, experiencing bathing insecurity (adjHR: 1.59 95 %CI: 1.12–2.24) and open defecation (adjHR: 1.65 95 %CI: 1.16–2.35). PWID in the Tijuana-San Diego metropolitan area reported facing high rates of insecurity accessing WASH services. Abscess incidence was higher (four to nine times) than observed rate among PWID cohorts in other settings. Access to continuously available toilet facilities, bathing infrastructure, and safe water sources for preparing drugs for injection could prevent abscesses among PWID. Accessible WASH infrastructure should be ensured among PWID communities and promoted as a key component of harm reduction infrastructure.