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Injecting drug use in Brighton, Liverpool, and London: best estimates of prevalence and coverage of public health indicators
  1. Matthew Hickman1,
  2. Vanessa Higgins2,
  3. Vivian Hope1,
  4. Mark Bellis2,
  5. Kate Tilling3,
  6. Angeline Walker4,
  7. John Henry5
  1. 1Centre for Research on Drugs and Health Behaviour, Social Science and Medicine, Primary Care and Population Sciences, Imperial College, London, UK
  2. 2Centre for Public Health, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK
  3. 3Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
  4. 4Brighton and Hove Drug Action Team, Brighton, UK
  5. 5Academic Department of Accident and Emergency Medicine, Imperial College, London, UK
  1. Correspondence to:
 Dr M Hickman
 CRDHB, Social Science and Medicine, Imperial College, Charing Cross Campus, St Dunstans Road, London SW6 1RQ, UK; m.hickmanimperial.ac.uk

Abstract

Study objective: To estimate the prevalence of injecting drug use (IDU) in three cities in England and to measure the coverage of key public health indicators.

Design: Capture-recapture techniques with covariate effects.

Setting: Liverpool, Brighton, and 12 London boroughs, 2000/01.

Participants: IDU collated and matched across five data sources—community recruited survey, specialist drug treatment, arrest referral, syringe exchange, and accident and emergency—896 in Brighton, 1224 in Liverpool, and 6111 in London.

Main results: It is estimated that in 2000/01 the number and prevalence of IDU aged 15–44 was 2300 (95%CI 1500 to 3700) and 2.0% (95%CI% 1.3% to 3.2%) in Brighton; 2900 (95%CI 2500 to 5000) and 1.5% (95%CI 1.3% to 2.6%) in Liverpool; 16 700 (95%CI 13 800 to 21 600) and 1.2% (95%CI 1.0% to 1.6%) in 12 London boroughs; with a prevalence of 1.7% (95%CI 1.2% to 3.3%) in inner London. It is estimated that: less than one in four IDU are in treatment in the three areas; syringe exchange programmes covered about 25% of injections in Brighton and Liverpool and 20% in London; and that the annual opioid mortality rate among IDU was 2% in Brighton compared with less than 1% in Liverpool and London.

Conclusions: Credible estimates of the prevalence of injecting drug use (and key public health indicators) can be determined using covariate capture-recapture techniques. These suggest that: targets to double the number in treatment are possible: syringe distribution should be increased; and further attention, especially in Brighton, given to reducing overdose mortality.

  • injecting drug use
  • prevalence
  • capture-recapture
  • IDU, injecting drug use
  • SEP, syringe exchange programme
  • A&E, accident and emergency

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Footnotes

  • Funding: the study was funded by the Home Office Research and Statistics Directorate. Matthew Hickman is funded through a Department of Health Public Health Career Scientist award. The Centre for Research on Drugs and Health Behaviour is core funded by the Department of Health.

  • Conflicts of interest: none declared.

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