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Estimating prevalence of injecting drug users and associated heroin-related death rates in England by using regional data and incorporating prior information

Estimating prevalence of injecting drug users and associated heroin-related death rates in England by using regional data and incorporating prior information
Estimating prevalence of injecting drug users and associated heroin-related death rates in England by using regional data and incorporating prior information
Injecting drug users (IDUs) have a direct social and economic effect yet can typically be regarded as a hidden population within a community. We estimate the size of the IDU population across the nine different Government Office regions of England in 2005–2006 by using capture–recapture methods with age (ranging from 15 to 64 years) and gender as covariate information. We consider a Bayesian model averaging approach using log-linear models, where we can include explicit prior information within the analysis in relation to the total IDU population (elicited from the number of drug-related deaths and injectors’ drug-related death rates). Estimation at the regional level allows for regional heterogeneity with these regional estimates aggregated to obtain a posterior mean estimate for the number of England's IDUs of 195840 with 95% credible interval (181700, 210480). There is significant variation in the estimated regional prevalence of current IDUs per million of population aged 15–64 years, and in injecting drug-related death rates across the gender × age cross-classifications. The propensity of an IDU to be seen by at least one source also exhibits strong regional variability with London having the lowest propensity of being observed (posterior mean probability 0.21) and the South West the highest propensity (posterior mean 0.46).
0964-1998
209-236
King, Ruth
64ab7d0e-2ce7-4c68-96c3-e25d876542be
Bird, Sheila
41cceac3-4dd3-4bf3-9faa-89fe223de976
Overstall, Antony
c1d6c8bd-1c5f-49ee-a845-ec9ec7b20910
Hay, Gordon
b87a1ece-b82e-4555-a6f0-4085ed49e04e
Hutchinson, Sharon
8e124af1-1224-4532-bcec-9f95b17fca36
King, Ruth
64ab7d0e-2ce7-4c68-96c3-e25d876542be
Bird, Sheila
41cceac3-4dd3-4bf3-9faa-89fe223de976
Overstall, Antony
c1d6c8bd-1c5f-49ee-a845-ec9ec7b20910
Hay, Gordon
b87a1ece-b82e-4555-a6f0-4085ed49e04e
Hutchinson, Sharon
8e124af1-1224-4532-bcec-9f95b17fca36

King, Ruth, Bird, Sheila, Overstall, Antony, Hay, Gordon and Hutchinson, Sharon (2014) Estimating prevalence of injecting drug users and associated heroin-related death rates in England by using regional data and incorporating prior information. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 177 (1), 209-236. (doi:10.1111/rssa.12011).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Injecting drug users (IDUs) have a direct social and economic effect yet can typically be regarded as a hidden population within a community. We estimate the size of the IDU population across the nine different Government Office regions of England in 2005–2006 by using capture–recapture methods with age (ranging from 15 to 64 years) and gender as covariate information. We consider a Bayesian model averaging approach using log-linear models, where we can include explicit prior information within the analysis in relation to the total IDU population (elicited from the number of drug-related deaths and injectors’ drug-related death rates). Estimation at the regional level allows for regional heterogeneity with these regional estimates aggregated to obtain a posterior mean estimate for the number of England's IDUs of 195840 with 95% credible interval (181700, 210480). There is significant variation in the estimated regional prevalence of current IDUs per million of population aged 15–64 years, and in injecting drug-related death rates across the gender × age cross-classifications. The propensity of an IDU to be seen by at least one source also exhibits strong regional variability with London having the lowest propensity of being observed (posterior mean probability 0.21) and the South West the highest propensity (posterior mean 0.46).

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e-pub ahead of print date: 23 April 2013
Published date: January 2014
Organisations: Statistics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 401173
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/401173
ISSN: 0964-1998
PURE UUID: 1623e67a-4973-40d2-8c3a-9e73b977349a
ORCID for Antony Overstall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0638-8635

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2016 14:21
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:27

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Contributors

Author: Ruth King
Author: Sheila Bird
Author: Gordon Hay
Author: Sharon Hutchinson

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