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ID: HR25-1513
Presenting author: Peter Meylakhs

Presenting author biography:

I am a sociologist who's been studying drug problems for over twenty years.

More Young and More Risky? Substance Use, Risk Behaviors, and HIV and HCV Prevalence among Young and Older People Who Use Drugs in St. Petersburg, Russia

Peter Meylakhs
Russia has an estimated 1.3-1.8 million people who inject drugs (PWID). In recent years concomitant decline of opioid use and rise of new psychoactive substances (NPS) use was observed. We conducted secondary analysis of survey data collected by a harm reduction organization in Saint-Petersburg, Russia (n = 978). The data were collected in 2019-2021 and analyzed using statistical and regression techniques. Older PWID group (30+) was significantly more likely to use opioids (87.5% vs. 32.4%) than young PWID; young PWID used NPS four times more frequently than older ones (79.9% vs. 21.5%). The odds ratio of being an exclusive stimulant user but not an opioid user among younger cohorts is more than forty-five times higher than among older cohorts all else being equal (AOR = 47.38; CI - 21.90-102.53; p < 0.001). The younger respondents were more than four times less likely to be HIV-positive than older participants (8.4% vs. 36.7%) and four times less likely to be HCV-positive (23.5% vs. 80.6%). Young PWID were significantly more prone to risk behaviors (syringes sharing in past month; having overdose in the last 12 months; and inconsistent condom use during past 3 months) than older PWID, which renders them vulnerable to rapid HIV and HCV transmission both by parenteral and sexual routes. It is possible that currently we are observing two epidemics – an “old” opioid epidemic among older generations of PWID and a new NPS epidemic among younger generations of PWID. New forms of harm reduction tailored to the needs of NPS users along with expansion of existing harm reduction programs for opioid users are urgently needed.