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      Reorienting risk to resilience: street-involved youth perspectives on preventing the transition to injection drug use

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          Abstract

          Background

          The Youth Injection Prevention (YIP) project aimed to identify factors associated with the prevention of transitioning to injection drug use (IDU) among street-involved youth (youth who had spent at least 3 consecutive nights without a fixed address or without their parents/caregivers in the previous six months) aged 16–24 years in Metro Vancouver, British Columbia.

          Methods

          Ten focus groups were conducted by youth collaborators (peer-researchers) with street-involved youth ( n = 47) from November 2009-April 2010. Audio recordings and focus group observational notes were transcribed verbatim and emergent themes identified by open coding and categorizing.

          Results

          Through ongoing data analysis we identified that youth produced risk and deficiency rather than resiliency-based answers. This enabled the questioning guide to be reframed into a strengths-based guide in a timely manner. Factors youth identified that prevented them from IDU initiation were grouped into three domains loosely derived from the risk environment framework: Individual (fear and self-worth), Social Environment (stigma and group norms – including street-entrenched adults who actively discouraged youth from IDU, support/inclusion, family/friend drug use and responsibilities), and Physical/Economic Environment (safe/engaging spaces). Engaging youth collaborators in the research ensured relevance and validity of the study.

          Conclusion

          Participants emphasized having personal goals and ties to social networks, supportive family and role models, and the need for safe and stable housing as key to resiliency. Gaining the perspectives of street-involved youth on factors that prevent IDU provides a complementary perspective to risk-based studies and encourages strength-based approaches for coaching and care of at-risk youth and upon which prevention programs should be built.

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          Most cited references44

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          The social structural production of HIV risk among injecting drug users.

          There is increasing appreciation of the need to understand how social and structural factors shape HIV risk. Drawing on a review of recently published literature, we seek to describe the social structural production of HIV risk associated with injecting drug use. We adopt an inclusive definition of the HIV 'risk environment' as the space, whether social or physical, in which a variety of factors exogenous to the individual interact to increase vulnerability to HIV. We identify the following factors as critical in the social structural production of HIV risk associated with drug injecting: cross-border trade and transport links; population movement and mixing; urban or neighbourhood deprivation and disadvantage; specific injecting environments (including shooting galleries and prisons); the role of peer groups and social networks; the relevance of 'social capital' at the level of networks, communities and neighbourhoods; the role of macro-social change and political or economic transition; political, social and economic inequities in relation to ethnicity, gender and sexuality; the role of social stigma and discrimination in reproducing inequity and vulnerability; the role of policies, laws and policing; and the role of complex emergencies such as armed conflict and natural disasters. We argue that the HIV risk environment is a product of interplay in which social and structural factors intermingle but where political-economic factors may play a predominant role. We therefore emphasise that much of the most needed 'structural HIV prevention' is unavoidably political in that it calls for community actions and structural changes within a broad framework concerned to alleviate inequity in health, welfare and human rights.
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            Youth sport programs: an avenue to foster positive youth development

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              A Constructionist Discourse on Resilience: Multiple Contexts, Multiple Realities among At-Risk Children and Youth

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                kira.tozer@alumni.ubc.ca
                despina.tzemis@bccdc.ca
                ashraf.amlani@bccdc.ca
                lacoser@gmail.com
                Darlene.Taylor@bccdc.ca
                NVanBorek@hollandbloorview.ca
                Elizabeth.Saewyc@ubc.ca
                Jane.Buxton@bccdc.ca
                Journal
                BMC Public Health
                BMC Public Health
                BMC Public Health
                BioMed Central (London )
                1471-2458
                19 August 2015
                19 August 2015
                2015
                : 15
                : 800
                Affiliations
                [ ]British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, 655 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver, BC V5Z4R4 Canada
                [ ]Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, BC V5A1S6 Canada
                [ ]School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, 2206 East Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T1Z3 Canada
                [ ]University of British Columbia School of Nursing, T201-2211 Westbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T2B5 Canada
                Article
                2153
                10.1186/s12889-015-2153-z
                4545775
                26286577
                0a72dd4a-4b87-4652-abe9-1727e2f32323
                © Tozer et al. 2015

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver(http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.

                History
                : 11 December 2014
                : 14 August 2015
                Categories
                Research Article
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2015

                Public health
                Public health

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