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Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya

Background: Female Sex Workers (FSWs) are at high risk of harmful alcohol and other drug use. We use quantitative data to describe the prevalence of alcohol and other drug use and identify associated occupational and socio-economic risk factors, and aim to elucidate patterns of alcohol and drug use...

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Autores principales: Beksinska, Alicja, Nyariki, Emily, Kabuti, Rhoda, Kungu, Mary, Babu, Hellen, Shah, Pooja, Nyabuto, Chrispo, Okumu, Monica, Mahero, Anne, Ngurukiri, Pauline, Jama, Zaina, Irungu, Erastus, Adhiambo, Wendy, Muthoga, Peter, Kaul, Rupert, Seeley, Janet, Weiss, Helen A., Kimani, Joshua, Beattie, Tara S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9223659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35742558
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19127294
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author Beksinska, Alicja
Nyariki, Emily
Kabuti, Rhoda
Kungu, Mary
Babu, Hellen
Shah, Pooja
Nyabuto, Chrispo
Okumu, Monica
Mahero, Anne
Ngurukiri, Pauline
Jama, Zaina
Irungu, Erastus
Adhiambo, Wendy
Muthoga, Peter
Kaul, Rupert
Seeley, Janet
Weiss, Helen A.
Kimani, Joshua
Beattie, Tara S.
author_facet Beksinska, Alicja
Nyariki, Emily
Kabuti, Rhoda
Kungu, Mary
Babu, Hellen
Shah, Pooja
Nyabuto, Chrispo
Okumu, Monica
Mahero, Anne
Ngurukiri, Pauline
Jama, Zaina
Irungu, Erastus
Adhiambo, Wendy
Muthoga, Peter
Kaul, Rupert
Seeley, Janet
Weiss, Helen A.
Kimani, Joshua
Beattie, Tara S.
author_sort Beksinska, Alicja
collection PubMed
description Background: Female Sex Workers (FSWs) are at high risk of harmful alcohol and other drug use. We use quantitative data to describe the prevalence of alcohol and other drug use and identify associated occupational and socio-economic risk factors, and aim to elucidate patterns of alcohol and drug use through information drawn from qualitative data. Methods: Maisha Fiti was a mixed-method longitudinal study conducted in 2019 among a random sample of FSWs in Nairobi, Kenya. We used baseline date from the behavioural–biological survey, which included the WHO Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test that measures harmful alcohol and other drug use in the past three months (moderate/high risk score: >11 for alcohol; >4 for other drugs). In-depth interviews were conducted with 40 randomly selected FSWs. Findings: Of 1003 participants, 29.9% (95%CI 27.0–32.6%) reported harmful (moderate/high risk) alcohol use, 21.5% harmful amphetamine use (95%CI 19.1–24.1%) and 16.9% harmful cannabis use (95%CI 14.7–19.2%). Quantitative analysis found that harmful alcohol, cannabis and amphetamine use were associated with differing risk factors including higher Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) scores, street homelessness, food insecurity (recent hunger), recent violence from clients, reduced condom use, depression/anxiety and police arrest. Qualitative interviews found that childhood neglect and violence were drivers of entry into sex work and alcohol use, and that alcohol and cannabis helped women cope with sex work. Conclusions: There is a need for individual and structural-level interventions, tailored for FSWs, to address harmful alcohol and other drug use and associated syndemic risks including ACEs, violence and sexual risk behaviours.
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spelling pubmed-92236592022-06-24 Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya Beksinska, Alicja Nyariki, Emily Kabuti, Rhoda Kungu, Mary Babu, Hellen Shah, Pooja Nyabuto, Chrispo Okumu, Monica Mahero, Anne Ngurukiri, Pauline Jama, Zaina Irungu, Erastus Adhiambo, Wendy Muthoga, Peter Kaul, Rupert Seeley, Janet Weiss, Helen A. Kimani, Joshua Beattie, Tara S. Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Background: Female Sex Workers (FSWs) are at high risk of harmful alcohol and other drug use. We use quantitative data to describe the prevalence of alcohol and other drug use and identify associated occupational and socio-economic risk factors, and aim to elucidate patterns of alcohol and drug use through information drawn from qualitative data. Methods: Maisha Fiti was a mixed-method longitudinal study conducted in 2019 among a random sample of FSWs in Nairobi, Kenya. We used baseline date from the behavioural–biological survey, which included the WHO Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test that measures harmful alcohol and other drug use in the past three months (moderate/high risk score: >11 for alcohol; >4 for other drugs). In-depth interviews were conducted with 40 randomly selected FSWs. Findings: Of 1003 participants, 29.9% (95%CI 27.0–32.6%) reported harmful (moderate/high risk) alcohol use, 21.5% harmful amphetamine use (95%CI 19.1–24.1%) and 16.9% harmful cannabis use (95%CI 14.7–19.2%). Quantitative analysis found that harmful alcohol, cannabis and amphetamine use were associated with differing risk factors including higher Adverse Childhood Experience (ACE) scores, street homelessness, food insecurity (recent hunger), recent violence from clients, reduced condom use, depression/anxiety and police arrest. Qualitative interviews found that childhood neglect and violence were drivers of entry into sex work and alcohol use, and that alcohol and cannabis helped women cope with sex work. Conclusions: There is a need for individual and structural-level interventions, tailored for FSWs, to address harmful alcohol and other drug use and associated syndemic risks including ACEs, violence and sexual risk behaviours. MDPI 2022-06-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9223659/ /pubmed/35742558 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19127294 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Beksinska, Alicja
Nyariki, Emily
Kabuti, Rhoda
Kungu, Mary
Babu, Hellen
Shah, Pooja
Nyabuto, Chrispo
Okumu, Monica
Mahero, Anne
Ngurukiri, Pauline
Jama, Zaina
Irungu, Erastus
Adhiambo, Wendy
Muthoga, Peter
Kaul, Rupert
Seeley, Janet
Weiss, Helen A.
Kimani, Joshua
Beattie, Tara S.
Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya
title Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya
title_full Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya
title_fullStr Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya
title_short Harmful Alcohol and Drug Use Is Associated with Syndemic Risk Factors among Female Sex Workers in Nairobi, Kenya
title_sort harmful alcohol and drug use is associated with syndemic risk factors among female sex workers in nairobi, kenya
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9223659/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35742558
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19127294
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