Journal of clinical forensic medicine
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J Clin Forensic Med · Sep 1994
The extent of injecting and syringe sharing in prison reported by Edinburgh drug clinic attenders.
68 outpatient attenders at Edinburgh's Community Drug Problem Service who reported a history of drug injecting and who had spent 1 week or more in prison between March 1987-March 1990 were interviewed about drug injecting behaviour and syringe sharing before and during each prison episode they reported. One-third of those injecting prior to prison continued to do so in prison, most doing so twice weekly or more. 80% of prison injectors shared syringes in prison. No subjects commenced their injecting career in prison, and being imprisoned did not cause past injectors who had stopped to resume injecting in custody. ⋯ Half of prison sharers used unofficially acquired bleach or disinfectant to sterilise injecting equipment. Continuing involvement with the courts and thus risk of reimprisonment was common. The findings support the case for harm reduction policies in Scottish prisons, and diversion from custody and into treatment for this high risk group.