HOME protocol for a national online survey of people who inject drugs
Winston E. Luhur, Cristina L. Chin, Jazmine M. Li, Grey Marsh, Dan Coello, Aaron Fox, Honoria Guarino, Denis Nash, Viraj V. Patel, Czarina N. Behrends

TL;DR
The HOME study uses an online survey to better understand and reach diverse populations of people who inject drugs across the country.
Contribution
The study introduces a national online recruitment protocol for people who inject drugs, aiming to improve data quality and inclusivity.
Findings
Online recruitment can reach underrepresented PWID populations, including those in rural or underserved areas.
The HOME study protocol includes strategies to detect fraud and retain participants over an 18-month period.
The study collects data on harm reduction service utilization and future uptake of mail-based services.
Abstract
Most surveys of people who inject drugs (PWID) fail to represent the full population of PWID, because usual recruitment methods do not achieve geographic and sociodemographic diversity. People of color, people residing in rural and/or harm reduction-deprived areas, and people who rarely connect with social services are the least surveyed and understood PWID populations. Online-based recruitment and surveys may better reach these hidden PWID populations than standard venue-based recruitment. As technology use and internet access become more ubiquitous, even for unstably housed populations, research using online-based recruitment and survey techniques are growing in the substance use field. These methods hold promise for obtaining larger and more diverse PWID samples, but there are no standards for using online recruitment and survey administration methods to reach large populations of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · Opioid Use Disorder Treatment · HIV/AIDS Research and Interventions
