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Characteristics of Intravenous Drug Users by History of Arrest and Treatment for Drug Use

NCJ Number
153144
Journal
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disorders Volume: 180 Issue: 1 Dated: (1992) Pages: 48-54
Author(s)
P Alcabes; D Vlahov; J C Anthony
Date Published
1992
Length
7 pages
Annotation
This study examines the various perspectives that can be obtained by studying intravenous drug users who might be encountered in work with the criminal justice system, in work with programs for the treatment of drug dependence, or through outreach to the community to tap intravenous drug users who have not been in drug dependence treatment, jail, or prison for a long time.
Abstract
Among 1,405 subjects who were recruited through extensive community outreach, 46 percent reported no history of treatment for drug abuse, and 16 percent said they had not been arrested in the preceding 10 years; 130 (9 percent) reported neither history. A history of arrest was higher among men and those with a history of treatment for drug abuse, low educational attainment, having received public assistance, and unemployment. A history of drug treatment was higher among women and those of an older age with a history of arrest, having received public assistance, and a greater duration and intensity of intravenous drug use. Intravenous drug users who had neither a history of arrest since 1977 nor of drug treatment were more likely to be women and more educated, to have not received public assistance, and to inject less than weekly. These data show that characteristics of intravenous drug users differ by history of arrest and treatment, substantiating reports of heterogeneity among intravenous drug users. 4 tables and 20 references

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