TY - JOUR
T1 - Neighborhood drug markets
T2 - A risk environment for bacterial sexually transmitted infections among urban youth
AU - Jennings, Jacky M.
AU - Taylor, Ralph B.
AU - Salhi, Rama A.
AU - Furr-Holden, Debra C.M.
AU - Ellen, Jonathan M.
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the following funding agencies: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (grant number R01 AI49530 ), National Institute of Drug Abuse (grant number K01 DA022298-01A1 ) with supplemental funding from the National Institutes on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism . The authors thank Dr. David Vlahov for insightful comments on an early draft of the manuscript. The authors also thank the young men and women who participated in the studies represented and to the study field staff for their data collection efforts.
PY - 2012/4
Y1 - 2012/4
N2 - We hypothesized that neighborhoods with drug markets, as compared to those without, have a greater concentration of infected sex partners, i.e. core transmitters, and that in these areas, there is an increased risk environment for STIs. This study determined if neighborhood drug markets were associated with a high-risk sex partnership and, separately, with a current bacterial STI (chlamydia and/or gonorrhea) after controlling for individual demographic and sexual risk factors among a household sample of young people in Baltimore City, MD. Analyses also tested whether links were independent of neighborhood socioeconomic status. Data for this study were collected from a household study, systematic social observations and police arrest, public health STI surveillance and U.S. census data. Nonlinear multilevel models showed that living in neighborhoods with household survey-reported drug markets increased the likelihood of having a high-risk sex partnership after controlling for individual-level demographic factors and illicit drug use and neighborhood socioeconomic status. Further, living in neighborhoods with survey-reported drug markets increased the likelihood of having a current bacterial STI after controlling for individual-level demographic and sexual risk factors and neighborhood socioeconomic status. The results suggest that local conditions in neighborhoods with drug markets may play an important role in setting-up risk environments for high-risk sex partnerships and bacterial STIs. Patterns observed appeared dependent on the type of drug market indicator used. Future studies should explore how conditions in areas with local drug markets may alter sexual networks structures and whether specific types of drug markets are particularly important in determining STI risk.
AB - We hypothesized that neighborhoods with drug markets, as compared to those without, have a greater concentration of infected sex partners, i.e. core transmitters, and that in these areas, there is an increased risk environment for STIs. This study determined if neighborhood drug markets were associated with a high-risk sex partnership and, separately, with a current bacterial STI (chlamydia and/or gonorrhea) after controlling for individual demographic and sexual risk factors among a household sample of young people in Baltimore City, MD. Analyses also tested whether links were independent of neighborhood socioeconomic status. Data for this study were collected from a household study, systematic social observations and police arrest, public health STI surveillance and U.S. census data. Nonlinear multilevel models showed that living in neighborhoods with household survey-reported drug markets increased the likelihood of having a high-risk sex partnership after controlling for individual-level demographic factors and illicit drug use and neighborhood socioeconomic status. Further, living in neighborhoods with survey-reported drug markets increased the likelihood of having a current bacterial STI after controlling for individual-level demographic and sexual risk factors and neighborhood socioeconomic status. The results suggest that local conditions in neighborhoods with drug markets may play an important role in setting-up risk environments for high-risk sex partnerships and bacterial STIs. Patterns observed appeared dependent on the type of drug market indicator used. Future studies should explore how conditions in areas with local drug markets may alter sexual networks structures and whether specific types of drug markets are particularly important in determining STI risk.
KW - Core transmitters
KW - Drug markets
KW - Medical geography
KW - Sexually transmitted infections
KW - Social epidemiology
KW - USA
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U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.12.040
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.12.040
M3 - Article
C2 - 22386616
AN - SCOPUS:84858624355
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 74
SP - 1240
EP - 1250
JO - Social Science and Medicine
JF - Social Science and Medicine
IS - 8
ER -