ResearchPublications

Peer-driven interventions in Vietnam and China to prevent HIV: A pilot study targeting injection drug users
Abstract

The HIV epidemic in China and Vietnam is on the increase among injection drug users (IDUs). We report on the results of a pilot outreach study in northern Vietnam and southern China to test the feasibility of a peer-driven intervention (PDI) to prevent HIV among IDUs. In the PDI, recruitment relies on a “chain-referral” model in which IDUs carry-out the care outreach activities that salaried outreach-workers/peer-educators traditionally provide. A 6-month follow-up was built into the study design to measure possible changes in IDUs’ risk behaviors. The impact results of the pilot study are reported bearing on several different measures, such as changes in IDUs’ rates of lending or borrowing used syringes, willingness to enter into drug treatment, baseline and follow-up recruitment success, and effectiveness of serving as peer-educators in the community. The evidence suggests the PDI is highly feasible and deserving of greater research in both China and Vietnam.

Full citation:
Broadhead RS, Hammett TM, Kling R, Doan N, Liu W, Chen Y, Hoang NQ, Kieu TB, Hoang VT, Borch C, Gauchat G, Des Jarlais DC (2009).
Peer-driven interventions in Vietnam and China to prevent HIV: A pilot study targeting injection drug users
Journal of Drug Issues, 39 (4), 829-850. doi: 10.1177/002204260903900403.