Epidemiology of injecting drug use, prevalence of injecting-related harm, and exposure to behavioural and environmental risks among people who inject drugs: a systematic review
UNSW Sydney · Alcohol and Drug Foundation · +3 more institutions
Abstract
People who inject drugs are exposed to various and changing risk environments and are at risk of multiple harms related to injecting drug use (IDU). We aimed to undertake a global systematic review of the prevalence of IDU, key IDU-related harms (including HIV, hepatitis C virus [HCV], and hepatitis B virus [HBV] infection and overdose), and key sociodemographic characteristics and risk exposures for people who inject drugs.
We systematically searched for data published between Jan 1, 2017, and March 31, 2022, in databases of peer-reviewed literature (MEDLINE, Embase, and PsycINFO) and grey literature as well as various agency or organisational websites, and disseminated data requests to international experts and agencies. We searched for data on the prevalence, characteristics, and risks of people who inject drugs, including gender, age, sexuality, drug-use patterns, HIV, HCV, and HBV infections, non-fatal overdose, depression, anxiety, and injecting-related disease. Additional data were extracted from studies identified in our previous review. Meta-analyses were used to pool the data where multiple estimates were available for a country. We present country, regional, and global estimates for each variable examined.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 53.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
19Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Grey literature
- Epidemiology
- MEDLINE
- PsycINFO
- Environmental health
- Harm reduction
- Hepatitis C
- Good health and well-being
Funding
- GSGilead Sciences
- IIndivior
- UOUniversity of New South Wales
- SSeqirus
- MRMedical Research CouncilAward: MR/N00616X/1
- NHNational Health and Medical Research CouncilAwards: 1150078, 1176131, 1135991
- NDNational Drug and Alcohol Research Centre
- NINational Institute of Allergy and Infectious DiseasesAward: R01AI147490