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Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada

BACKGROUND: The structure of a social network as well as peer behaviours are thought to affect personal substance use. Where substance use may create health risks, understanding the contribution of social networks to substance use may be valuable for the design and implementation of harm reduction o...

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Autores principales: Knerich, Verena, Jones, Andrea A., Seyedin, Sam, Siu, Christopher, Dinh, Louie, Mostafavi, Sara, Barr, Alasdair M., Panenka, William J., Thornton, Allen E., Honer, William G., Rutherford, Alexander R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6756550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31545818
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222611
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author Knerich, Verena
Jones, Andrea A.
Seyedin, Sam
Siu, Christopher
Dinh, Louie
Mostafavi, Sara
Barr, Alasdair M.
Panenka, William J.
Thornton, Allen E.
Honer, William G.
Rutherford, Alexander R.
author_facet Knerich, Verena
Jones, Andrea A.
Seyedin, Sam
Siu, Christopher
Dinh, Louie
Mostafavi, Sara
Barr, Alasdair M.
Panenka, William J.
Thornton, Allen E.
Honer, William G.
Rutherford, Alexander R.
author_sort Knerich, Verena
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The structure of a social network as well as peer behaviours are thought to affect personal substance use. Where substance use may create health risks, understanding the contribution of social networks to substance use may be valuable for the design and implementation of harm reduction or other interventions. We examined the social support network of people living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, and analysed associations between social network structure, personal substance use, and supporters’ substance use. METHODS: An ongoing, longitudinal study recruited 246 participants from four single room occupancy hotels, with 201 providing social network information aligned with a 6-month observation period. Use of tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, cocaine (crack and powder), methamphetamine, and heroin was recorded at monthly visits. Ego- and graph-level measures were calculated; the dispersion and prevalence of substances in the network was described. Logistic mixed effects models were used to estimate the association between ego substance use and peer substance use. Permutation analysis was done to test for randomness of substance use dispersion on the social network. RESULTS: The network topology corresponded to residence (Hotel) with two clusters differing in demographic characteristics (Cluster 1 –Hotel A: 94% of members, Cluster 2 –Hotel B: 95% of members). Dispersion of substance use across the network demonstrated differences according to network topology and specific substance. Methamphetamine use (overall 12%) was almost entirely limited to Cluster 1, and absent from Cluster 2. Different patterns were observed for other substances. Overall, ego substance use did not differ over the six-month period of observation. Ego heroin, cannabis, or crack cocaine use was associated with alter use of the same substances. Ego methamphetamine, powder cocaine, or alcohol use was not associated with alter use, with the exception for methamphetamine in a densely using part of the network. For alters using multiple substances, cannabis use was associated with lower ego heroin use, and lower ego crack cocaine use. Permutation analysis also provided evidence that dispersion of substance use, and the association between ego and alter use was not random for all substances. CONCLUSIONS: In a socially marginalized neighborhood, social network topology was strongly influenced by residence, and in turn was associated with type(s) of substance use. Associations between personal use and supporter’s use of a substance differed across substances. These complex associations may merit consideration in the design of interventions to reduce risk and harms associated with substance use in people living in precarious housing.
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spelling pubmed-67565502019-10-04 Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada Knerich, Verena Jones, Andrea A. Seyedin, Sam Siu, Christopher Dinh, Louie Mostafavi, Sara Barr, Alasdair M. Panenka, William J. Thornton, Allen E. Honer, William G. Rutherford, Alexander R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The structure of a social network as well as peer behaviours are thought to affect personal substance use. Where substance use may create health risks, understanding the contribution of social networks to substance use may be valuable for the design and implementation of harm reduction or other interventions. We examined the social support network of people living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, and analysed associations between social network structure, personal substance use, and supporters’ substance use. METHODS: An ongoing, longitudinal study recruited 246 participants from four single room occupancy hotels, with 201 providing social network information aligned with a 6-month observation period. Use of tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, cocaine (crack and powder), methamphetamine, and heroin was recorded at monthly visits. Ego- and graph-level measures were calculated; the dispersion and prevalence of substances in the network was described. Logistic mixed effects models were used to estimate the association between ego substance use and peer substance use. Permutation analysis was done to test for randomness of substance use dispersion on the social network. RESULTS: The network topology corresponded to residence (Hotel) with two clusters differing in demographic characteristics (Cluster 1 –Hotel A: 94% of members, Cluster 2 –Hotel B: 95% of members). Dispersion of substance use across the network demonstrated differences according to network topology and specific substance. Methamphetamine use (overall 12%) was almost entirely limited to Cluster 1, and absent from Cluster 2. Different patterns were observed for other substances. Overall, ego substance use did not differ over the six-month period of observation. Ego heroin, cannabis, or crack cocaine use was associated with alter use of the same substances. Ego methamphetamine, powder cocaine, or alcohol use was not associated with alter use, with the exception for methamphetamine in a densely using part of the network. For alters using multiple substances, cannabis use was associated with lower ego heroin use, and lower ego crack cocaine use. Permutation analysis also provided evidence that dispersion of substance use, and the association between ego and alter use was not random for all substances. CONCLUSIONS: In a socially marginalized neighborhood, social network topology was strongly influenced by residence, and in turn was associated with type(s) of substance use. Associations between personal use and supporter’s use of a substance differed across substances. These complex associations may merit consideration in the design of interventions to reduce risk and harms associated with substance use in people living in precarious housing. Public Library of Science 2019-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6756550/ /pubmed/31545818 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222611 Text en © 2019 Knerich et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Knerich, Verena
Jones, Andrea A.
Seyedin, Sam
Siu, Christopher
Dinh, Louie
Mostafavi, Sara
Barr, Alasdair M.
Panenka, William J.
Thornton, Allen E.
Honer, William G.
Rutherford, Alexander R.
Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada
title Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada
title_full Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada
title_fullStr Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada
title_short Social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada
title_sort social and structural factors associated with substance use within the support network of adults living in precarious housing in a socially marginalized neighborhood of vancouver, canada
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6756550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31545818
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222611
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