Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?

Respondent driven sampling (RDS) was originally developed to sample and provide peer education to injection drug users at risk for HIV. Based on the premise that drug users' social networks were maintained through sharing rituals, this peer-driven approach to disseminate educational information...

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Main Authors: Abby E Rudolph, Carl Latkin, Natalie D Crawford, Kandice C Jones, Crystal M Fuller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-05-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3089627?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-0df97f6b416344e6a663746af952a0832020-11-24T20:52:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-05-0165e1961510.1371/journal.pone.0019615Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?Abby E RudolphCarl LatkinNatalie D CrawfordKandice C JonesCrystal M FullerRespondent driven sampling (RDS) was originally developed to sample and provide peer education to injection drug users at risk for HIV. Based on the premise that drug users' social networks were maintained through sharing rituals, this peer-driven approach to disseminate educational information and reduce risk behaviors capitalizes and expands upon the norms that sustain these relationships. Compared with traditional outreach interventions, peer-driven interventions produce greater reductions in HIV risk behaviors and adoption of safer behaviors over time, however, control and intervention groups are not similarly recruited. As peer-recruitment may alter risk networks and individual risk behaviors over time, such comparison studies are unable to isolate the effect of a peer-delivered intervention. This analysis examines whether RDS recruitment (without an intervention) is associated with changes in health-seeking behaviors and network composition over 6 months. New York City drug users (N = 618) were recruited using targeted street outreach (TSO) and RDS (2006-2009). 329 non-injectors (RDS = 237; TSO = 92) completed baseline and 6-month surveys ascertaining demographic, drug use, and network characteristics. Chi-square and t-tests compared RDS- and TSO-recruited participants on changes in HIV testing and drug treatment utilization and in the proportion of drug using, sex, incarcerated and social support networks over the follow-up period. The sample was 66% male, 24% Hispanic, 69% black, 62% homeless, and the median age was 35. At baseline, the median network size was 3, 86% used crack, 70% used cocaine, 40% used heroin, and in the past 6 months 72% were tested for HIV and 46% were enrolled in drug treatment. There were no significant differences by recruitment strategy with respect to changes in health-seeking behaviors or network composition over 6 months. These findings suggest no association between RDS recruitment and changes in network composition or HIV risk, which supports prior findings from prospective HIV behavioral surveillance and intervention studies.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3089627?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abby E Rudolph
Carl Latkin
Natalie D Crawford
Kandice C Jones
Crystal M Fuller
spellingShingle Abby E Rudolph
Carl Latkin
Natalie D Crawford
Kandice C Jones
Crystal M Fuller
Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Abby E Rudolph
Carl Latkin
Natalie D Crawford
Kandice C Jones
Crystal M Fuller
author_sort Abby E Rudolph
title Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?
title_short Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?
title_full Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?
title_fullStr Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?
title_full_unstemmed Does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?
title_sort does respondent driven sampling alter the social network composition and health-seeking behaviors of illicit drug users followed prospectively?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-05-01
description Respondent driven sampling (RDS) was originally developed to sample and provide peer education to injection drug users at risk for HIV. Based on the premise that drug users' social networks were maintained through sharing rituals, this peer-driven approach to disseminate educational information and reduce risk behaviors capitalizes and expands upon the norms that sustain these relationships. Compared with traditional outreach interventions, peer-driven interventions produce greater reductions in HIV risk behaviors and adoption of safer behaviors over time, however, control and intervention groups are not similarly recruited. As peer-recruitment may alter risk networks and individual risk behaviors over time, such comparison studies are unable to isolate the effect of a peer-delivered intervention. This analysis examines whether RDS recruitment (without an intervention) is associated with changes in health-seeking behaviors and network composition over 6 months. New York City drug users (N = 618) were recruited using targeted street outreach (TSO) and RDS (2006-2009). 329 non-injectors (RDS = 237; TSO = 92) completed baseline and 6-month surveys ascertaining demographic, drug use, and network characteristics. Chi-square and t-tests compared RDS- and TSO-recruited participants on changes in HIV testing and drug treatment utilization and in the proportion of drug using, sex, incarcerated and social support networks over the follow-up period. The sample was 66% male, 24% Hispanic, 69% black, 62% homeless, and the median age was 35. At baseline, the median network size was 3, 86% used crack, 70% used cocaine, 40% used heroin, and in the past 6 months 72% were tested for HIV and 46% were enrolled in drug treatment. There were no significant differences by recruitment strategy with respect to changes in health-seeking behaviors or network composition over 6 months. These findings suggest no association between RDS recruitment and changes in network composition or HIV risk, which supports prior findings from prospective HIV behavioral surveillance and intervention studies.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3089627?pdf=render
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