Severe illness and death among injecting drug users in Scotland: a case-control study
- Avril Taylor,
- S. Hutchinson,
- J. Lingappa,
- ,
- S. Ahmed,
- L. Gruer
- University of the West of Scotland,
- University of Glasgow,
- Public Health Scotland,
- University of Washington,
- ,
- NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde
Sustainable Development Goals
- SDG 3 Good Health and Well
Abstract
Between April and September 2000, 60 injecting drug users in Scotland died or were hospitalized with severe illness. Laboratory investigations suggested that Clostridium novyi and other bacteria were important aetiological agents. To determine associated environmental/behavioural factors a case-control study was undertaken with 19 'definite' and 32 'probable' cases in Glasgow, Scotland. For every deceased case (n=19), up to three proxy individuals were interviewed. Three controls were identified for each case. Multivariate logistic regression analyses compared (i) all cases and controls; (ii) definite cases and matched controls; (iii) probable cases and matched controls. In all three analyses injecting into muscle or skin and injecting most of the time with a filter used by someone else were the variables most strongly associated with illness. Comparing only muscle-injecting cases and controls, cases were significantly more likely to have injected larger amounts of heroin per average injection than were controls. The findings make an important epidemiological contribution to the understanding of the public health and clinical implications of the contamination of illicit drugs by histotoxic clostridia.
Publication Information
Output type
Original language
EnglishPages from-to (Number of pages)
Pages 193-204 (12 pages)Journal (Volume, Issue Number)
Epidemiology and Infection (Volume 133, Issue 2)Publication milestones
- Published - 22/12/2004
Publication status
ISSN
0950-2688External Publication IDs
- Scopus: 20144388647
- PubMed: 15816144
