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   <ref-type name="Journal Article">17</ref-type>
   <contributors>
    <authors>
     <author></author>
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     <author></author>
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     <author></author>
     <author></author>
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     <author></author>
     <author></author>
     <author></author>
     <author></author>
     <author></author>
    </authors>
   </contributors>
   <titles>
    <title></title>
   </titles>
   <dates>
    <year>2023</year>
    <pub-dates>
     <date>2023-01-25</date>
    </pub-dates>
   </dates>
   <doi>10.1016/j.drugpo.2022.103907</doi>
   <abstract>Background: The HIV epidemic is intertwined with substance use and incarceration in Russia. The relationships&#13;
between incarceration history, HIV treatment history, and stigma experiences among people with HIV (PWH)&#13;
who inject drugs in Russia have not been well described.&#13;
Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study of a cohort of PWH with opioid use disorder who inject drugs&#13;
(n=201) recruited at a narcology (substance use treatment) hospital in St. Petersburg, Russia from September 2018&#13;
to December 2020. The primary analysis evaluated the association between self-reported prior incarceration and&#13;
prior antiretroviral therapy (ART) initiation using multivariable logistic regression to adjust for demographic,&#13;
social, and clinical covariates. We used multivariable linear regression models to analyze associations between&#13;
prior incarceration and two secondary outcomes: HIV stigma score (11-item abbreviated Berger scale) and substance use stigma score (21-item combination of Substance Abuse Self-Stigma Scale and Stigma-related Rejection&#13;
Scale).&#13;
Results: Mean age was 37 (SD 5) years; 58.7% were male. Participants had been living with HIV for a mean&#13;
of 13 (SD 6) years. Over two thirds (69.2%) of participants reported prior incarceration. One third (35.3%) of&#13;
participants reported prior ART initiation. Prior incarceration was not significantly associated with prior ART&#13;
initiation (AOR 1.76; 95% CI: 0.81, 3.83). Prior incarceration was associated with a lower HIV stigma score&#13;
(adjusted mean difference in z-score: −0.50; 95%CI: −0.81, −0.19) but was not significantly associated with&#13;
substance use stigma score (adjusted mean difference in z-score: −0.10; 95%CI: −0.42, 0.21).&#13;
Conclusion: Prior incarceration was common, and rates of prior ART initiation were low even though most participants had been living with HIV for at least a decade. We did not find an association between prior incarceration&#13;
and prior ART initiation, which suggests a need to explore whether opportunities to initiate ART during or after&#13;
incarceration are missed</abstract>
   <urls>
    <web-urls>
     <url>https://repo.bashgmu.ru/publication/3939</url>
    </web-urls>
    <pdf-urls>
     <url>https://repo.bashgmu.ru/files/4115</url>
    </pdf-urls>
   </urls>
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