© 2003 American Public Health Association
Sherry Deren, Sung-Yeon Kang, Jonny F. Andia, and Denise Oliver-Velez are with the National Development and Research Institutes Inc, New York, NY. Hector M. Colón, Rafaela R. Robles, and Ann Finlinson are with the Center for Addiction Studies, Universidad Central del Caribe, Bayamón, Puerto Rico. Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Sherry Deren, PhD, National Development and Research Institutes, 71 W 23rd St, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10010 (e-mail: deren{at}ndri.org).
Objectives. We compared injection-related HIV risk behaviors of Puerto Rican current injection drug users (IDUs) living in New York City and in Puerto Rico who also had injected in the other location with those who had not. Methods. We recruited Puerto Rican IDUs in New York City (n = 561) and in Puerto Rico (n = 312). Of the former, 39% were "newcomers," having previously injected in Puerto Rico; of the latter, 14% were "returnees," having previously injected in New York. We compared risk behaviors within each sample between those with and without experience injecting in the other location. Results. Newcomers reported higher levels of risk behaviors than other New York IDUs. Newcomer status (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 1.62) and homelessness (adjusted OR = 2.52) were significant predictors of "shooting gallery" use; newcomer status also predicted paraphernalia sharing (adjusted OR = 1.67). Returnee status was not related to these variables. Conclusions. Intervention services are needed that target mobile populations who are coming from an environment of high-risk behavior to one of low-risk behavior.
The relationship between migration and HIV-related risk behaviors has been reported among diverse populations, including Hispanic populations in the Caribbean and Mexico who travel to New York13 and migrant workers in southern Africa.4 Studies have found that travel to an AIDS epicenter is related to HIV infection among drug users from low-prevalence communities.5,6 High rates of HIV/AIDS and HIV-related risk behaviors have been found among Puerto Rican injection drug users (IDUs).79 An "air bridge" has been identified between New York and Puerto Rico that represents high reported rates of travel and migration between Puerto Rico and New York,2 and higher levels of risk behaviors have been reported for Puerto Rican IDUs who reside on the island of Puerto Rico compared with those who reside in New York City.1012 In addition, services that have been found to reduce risk behaviors (e.g., needle exchange programs [NEPs], methadone treatment) are more readily available in New York City.12,13 The extensive migration/travel reported between the 2 communities2 provides an opportunity to compare differences in levels of risk behaviors between IDUs at each location who have experienced injecting in the other location and thus to examine risk behaviors of those who have been socialized in injection behaviors in a community with higher- or lower-risk behaviors than their current community. This information can be helpful in developing and targeting appropriate intervention programs for IDUs who are immigrants. This study was based on data from a dual-site study of Puerto Rican IDUs recruited in New York City and in Puerto Rico.11 We compared injection-related risk behaviors for IDUs in New York between those who had previously injected in Puerto Rico and those who had not and for IDUs in Puerto Rico between those who had previously injected in New York and those who had not.
The Alliance for Research in El Barrio and Bayamón project was funded to assess differences in HIV risk behavior determinants between Puerto Rican IDUs and crack smokers living in New York and those living in Puerto Rico. We conducted recruitment in East Harlem, New York, and Bayamón, Puerto Rico (part of the greater San Juan metropolitan area). We established teams of researchers, including qualitative and survey researchers in each site and used multiple methods to ensure comparability of procedures for data collection, including jointly developing instruments and conducting pilot tests of the interviews in both locations.11,14 The interviews were developed in English and translated into Spanish. We established the fidelity of translation and comparability of terms through back-translation, review of terms by both research teams, and pilot tests.
Recruitment We recruited subjects between January 1998 and July 1999. Eligible subjects were aged 18 years or older, identified themselves as Puerto Rican, and had injected drugs (usually heroin, cocaine, or speedball [a combination of heroin and cocaine]) or smoked crack within the last 30 days. After recruitment, subjects were brought to the field site in each location, where recent heroin and/or cocaine use was verified through urinalysis with the OnTrak system (Roche Diagnostics Corp, Indianapolis, Ind) and an informed consent was obtained. This article concerns only those participants who reported injecting drugs within the past 30 days.
Interviewing
Variables Examined Four injection-related variables were selected as dependent measures: (1) frequency of injection (which has been related to HIV seroincidence16); (2) injecting in "shooting galleries," settings where others are injecting and where resources for injection are provided (which has been associated with increased needle and paraphernalia sharing17); (3) sharing of syringes; and (4) sharing of other injection-related paraphernalia that also may transmit HIV, including cookers, cottons, and rinse water.18
Analysis
We recruited a total of 873 IDUs: 561 in New York City and 312 in Puerto Rico. Demographic and migration characteristics indicated that the majority of IDUs in both sites were male and had been born in Puerto Rico (56% of those recruited in New York and 87% of those recruited in Puerto Rico) (Table 1
The New York sample had been injecting for a longer period (18 years vs 13 years in Puerto Rico; P < .001), were less likely to report sharing of injection equipment (for example, 10% shared syringes vs 37% in Puerto Rico; P < .001), and were less likely to have injected speedball during the past 30 days (52% vs 90% in Puerto Rico; P < .001).
There were significant sociodemographic differences between the newcomers and other New York recruits and between the returnees and other Puerto Rico recruits (Table 2
HIV Risk Behaviors The newcomers to New York reported more years of injecting and more frequent injecting than other New York IDUs (Table 2 .001). There were no statistically significant differences (P < .05) in these behaviors between the returnees to Puerto Rico and the other IDUs recruited in Puerto Rico. The significant differences in risk behaviors between Puerto Rican IDUs recruited in New York and those recruited in Puerto Rico have been reported elsewhere.10,11
We conducted multivariate analyses for the 4 risk behaviors, controlling for 3 sociodemographic variables (sex, age, and homelessness), to assess the influence of being a newcomer in New York and a returnee in Puerto Rico (Table 3
The newcomer IDUs who had injected in Puerto Rico and moved to New York Citya location with lower levels of injection-related risk behaviors and more tools available for risk reductionevidenced higher levels of risk behaviors than other Puerto Rican IDUs in New York. However, these newcomers levels of risk behaviors were still lower than those found in the Puerto Rico sample. Shooting-gallery use in New York was influenced by newcomer status as well as homelessness, with almost half of all IDUs who were homeless newcomers reporting shooting-gallery use. The returnee IDUs who had injected in New York and were now injecting in Puerto Rico reported levels of risk behaviors that were not significantly different from the high levels shown by other IDUs recruited in Puerto Rico. Other research suggests that environmental structural differences, including the greater availability of NEPs and drug treatment programs in New York, may account for some of the differences in level of risk behaviors in the 2 communities.14,19 In addition, focus groups conducted for the current project with newcomers in New York indicated that many of the newly arrived IDUs reported coming to New York because of the greater ease of getting into methadone maintenance treatment programs as well as access to welfare, Medicaid, and other services. Nonetheless, in-depth interviews indicated that some new arrivals may have difficulties in accessing these services (D. Oliver-Velez, personal communication, December 2000). Focus groups with returnees in Puerto Rico and newcomers in New York confirmed these environmental differences as well as differences in drug treatment availability (with participants expressing concerns about the lack of treatment access in Puerto Rico) and the greater availability of shooting galleries in Puerto Rico.20 Other qualitative research in New York involving observations in the community provided reports of homeless newcomers engaging in high-risk injection behaviors (D. Oliver-Velez, personal communication, December 2000). These survey and qualitative results point to the need for services specifically targeting new arrivals from Puerto Rico that address language issues, homelessness, and the need for a variety of services, including drug treatment. Research is needed into the attempts of newcomers to access services and the barriers to utilizing services. In addition, our finding that new arrivals to New York may be practicing riskier behaviors than other New York IDUs should be incorporated into prevention/intervention messages to help these new arrivals in accessing risk-reduction tools (such as new needles from NEPs and pharmacies) and to encourage their injection partners in New York to assist them with risk reduction. Providers of drug treatment, NEPs, and related services can be alerted to help assess risk behaviors of individuals who may be newcomers so that appropriate risk-reduction messages and referrals can be provided. The finding that returnees to Puerto Rico appear to take on the risk behaviors local to Puerto Rico also can be incorporated into prevention efforts in both locations, although this may be difficult in an environment of reduced resources and higher risks. It may be possible, nonetheless, to train IDUs who travel to Puerto Rico to help influence IDUs in the new location to reduce their risks within the environmental constraints. For example, if new needles are not available, these trained "change agents" can encourage fellow IDUs to follow recommended bleach-cleaning practices before sharing needles. Research on how these emissary efforts can be successfully undertaken should be conducted, and the impact on the emissaries themselves as well as other IDUs should be assessed. There are several limitations of these data. As with all studies of "hidden populations" such as drug users, random sampling of the population is not possible. Nonetheless, targeted sampling based on ethnographic mapping within each community helped ensure broad-based recruitment of the population. The possibility for multiple back-and-forth visits, referred to as "circular migration," was not taken into account, although the criteria of having injected in the other location and having lived there for at least 1 year since initiating regular drug use helped ensure that participants identified as newcomers or returnees had substantial experience in injecting in the other location. Additionally, some of those participants identified as newcomers actually may have lived in New York for many years and thus may not be newcomers in terms of being recent arrivals. Finally, the relatively small sample size of returnees to Puerto Rico may limit the power to detect significant differences between them and other IDUs there. HIV infection among injection drug users had been reported in 114 countries by mid-1999,21 and increases in emigration from many countries to the United States have been reported, based on the 2000 US Census.22 In addition, we found that immigrants with limited resources who may be homeless or only temporarily domiciled appear to be particularly at risk of engaging in high-risk behaviors. These trends point to the need to implement effective prevention efforts to reduce HIV transmission in mobile populations. Our findings have implications for HIV prevention efforts geared to mobile IDU populations. Efforts targeting these populations should be based on knowledge of the behaviors and risk-reduction resources in the communities from which individuals are emigrating as well as in the new host communities. Efforts to encourage the use of available risk-reduction services and to make these services more accessible to the migrant population (e.g., by offering services in appropriate languages and developing culturally appropriate educational materials) are needed to maximize their utility. In addition, incorporating information about the new risks or potential risk-increasing factors that may affect immigrants (e.g., for IDUs who may be immigrating to areas where shooting galleries are widely available) can be helpful in reducing HIVrelated risks and HIV transmission.
This study was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (grant RO1DA10425). We are grateful to the project staff at the Universidad Central del Caribe and the National Development and Research Institutes for their assistance in data collection and project administration, and to Shiela Strauss, PhD, who provided consultation on data analysis. S. Deren conceptualized the study and wrote the article. S.-Y. Kang conducted the analyses. H. M. Colón, J. F. Andia, R. R. Robles, D. Oliver-Velez, and A. Finlinson assisted in designing the questionnaire and contributed to writing the article. H. M. Colón oversaw data collection in Puerto Rico, and J. F. Andia oversaw data collection in New York. D. Oliver-Velez and A. Finlinson collected the qualitative data.
Human Participant Protection
Peer Reviewed Accepted for publication September 6, 2002.
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