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. 2020 May;23(5):e25492.
doi: 10.1002/jia2.25492.

Stigma and quality of co-located care for HIV-positive people in addiction treatment in Ukraine: a cross-sectional study

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Stigma and quality of co-located care for HIV-positive people in addiction treatment in Ukraine: a cross-sectional study

Yuliia Sereda et al. J Int AIDS Soc. 2020 May.

Abstract

Introduction: Co-located treatment for HIV and opioid use disorder has been shown to improve care outcomes for HIV-positive people who inject drugs (PWID) in Ukraine. However, patients continue to be stigmatized for both HIV and substance use. This study aimed to assess whether co-located care for HIV-positive PWID receiving opioid agonist treatment (OAT) services in Ukraine is associated with less stigma and better perceived quality of HIV services.

Methods: This cross-sectional study enrolled 191 HIV-positive PWID who received OAT services at three healthcare facilities providing substance use treatment (OAT only) and at four facilities that provided co-located care (both OAT and HIV treatment) in six regions in Ukraine during July-September, 2017. Primary outcomes were HIV stigma (Berger scale), substance use stigma (Substance Abuse Stigma Scale) and intersectional stigma (both stigma forms above 75th percentile). Secondary outcome was quality of HIV care, a composite score based on a package of received services. Linear and ordinal regressions were used to assess the predictors of selected outcomes.

Results: Study participants were 75% male, mean age 40 ± 7 years; 47% received co-located care, and 10.5% had both high HIV and substance use stigma. Co-located care was neither associated with HIV nor substance use stigma but it was linked to better quality of HIV care (adjusted odds ratio: 4.13; 95% CI: 2.31, 7.54). HIV stigma was associated with suicide attempts (adjusted beta (aβ): 5.90; 95% CI: 2.05, 9.75), and substance use stigma was linked to poor mental health (aβ: -0.26; 95% CI: -0.44, -0.08) and lower likelihood of receipt of services from non-governmental organization (NGO; aβ: -6.40; 95% CI: -10.23, -2.57).

Conclusion: One in ten people with HIV in this cohort who received OAT services experienced high levels of both HIV and substance use stigma, which was associated with poorer mental health and less NGO support. Co-located HIV and OAT services were linked to better perceived quality of HIV care, but did not seem to reduce stigma for this key population. Stigma interventions for PWID, possibly delivered involving NGOs, may be an approach to mitigate this challenge.

Keywords: HIV; bias; co-located care; discrimination; injection drug use; quality of care.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Intersection between HIV and substance use stigma scores among HIV‐positive PWID receiving opioid agonist therapy at seven sites in Ukraine, n = 190. This chart shows the intersection between HIV and substance use stigma, depicted as number of people with a given HIV stigma score quartile within each substance use stigma quartile. Missing data on HIV and substance use stigma scores were excluded (n = 1). PWID, people who inject drugs.

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