Drug abuse, risks of infectious diseases and service utilization among former Soviet Union immigrants: a view from New York City

Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse
Richard E IsralowitzAndrew Rosenblum

Abstract

Based on the high rates of injection drug use and infectious disease such as HIV, HCV and tuberculosis in their home country, immigrants from the Former Soviet Union (FSU) comprise a high-risk population in the United States. Yet, little is known about their drug abuse and health problems relative to other immigrant populations like Hispanics. The objectives of this exploratory study were to identify disease risk behavior, and utilization of and barriers to treatment services among drug using immigrants from the FSU. Focused interviews were conducted with 27 public officials and administrators in New York City. This study found that FSU immigrants tend to have culturally unique drug abuse patterns and behavior, such as rapid transition to injection drug use, and suspicion and avoidance of traditional drug treatment approaches. The findings of this exploratory study point to the need for further research and the need to take immediate steps to promote culturally appropriate treatment and prevention services that can address the spread of harmful behavior that threatens the public health of FSU immigrants and others.

References

Nov 28, 2002·American Journal of Public Health·William Alex Pridemore
Jul 13, 2004·The New England Journal of Medicine·Mark G Field

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Citations

Feb 15, 2014·Journal of the American Society of Hypertension : JASH·Talma Rosenthal
Aug 9, 2013·Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health·Richard Isralowitz, Alexander Reznik
Apr 14, 2007·Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse·Richard E Isralowitz, Alex Reznik
Oct 20, 2006·The Gerontologist·Richard IsralowitzSofia Borkin
Jul 6, 2017·Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse·Yakhnich Liat
Nov 3, 2020·Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse·Aline PouilleWouter Vanderplasschen

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