Summary
The second wave of integrated bio-behavioural surveys was conducted among people who inject drugs (PWID) in the cities of Zagreb, Split, and Rijeka in Croatia to estimate the prevalence of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies and sexual and injecting risk behaviours.Download as PDF
PDF files are made available as a convenience. In cases where the EUDA is not the originator of the document, please be aware that any PDFs available on this page may not be authoritative or there may be more recent versions available. While we make every effort to ensure that these files are definitive, before using or citing them, we recommend that you consult the publisher's website or contact the author(s) to check for more recent versions.
Abstract
Background
The second wave of integrated bio-behavioural surveys was conducted among people who inject drugs (PWID) in the cities of Zagreb, Split, and Rijeka in Croatia to estimate the prevalence of HIV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) antibodies and sexual and injecting risk behaviours.
Methods
Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) was used to recruit a total of 301 PWID in Split, 130 in Rijeka, and 86 in Zagreb from March to July 2022. Participants provided biological specimens for HIV and HCV testing and completed a behavioural questionnaire. RDS-Analyst software was used to calculate weighted population estimates with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI).
Results
Approximately one in four PWID were women (range from 24.3% in Zagreb to 29.9% in Rijeka). Overall, HIV prevalence was low, with no cases identified in Zagreb, and 0.6% and 0.8% in Split and Rijeka, respectively. HCV antibody prevalence was 37.2% among PWID in Zagreb and Rijeka, and as high as 59.5% in Split. Testing for HIV and HCV in the 12 months before the survey was reported by 11.3-19.8% and 17.3-21.6% of PWID across the cities, respectively. Use of needles and syringes in the past 30 days that had already been used by someone else was reported by 8.9-26.5% across the cities. A large proportion of PWID—54.0% in Zagreb, 31.0% in Rijeka and 29.9% in Split—never used needle and syringe exchange programmes. Being in drug addiction treatment at the time of the survey was reported by 50.8% in Split, 57.3% in Rijeka and 73.3% in Zagreb. Injecting cocaine in 30 days before the survey was common, ranging from 12.7 to 32.1% across the cities.
Conclusion
HIV prevalence continues to be low among PWID in Croatia, whereas HCV prevalence is substantial. Due to low coverage of HIV and HCV testing and insufficient use of harm reduction services, there is a potential for further spread of drug-related infectious diseases in this population.