“…During marginalization, there is an increase in both the perceived and objective distance to resources such that there is differential access to, and inequity in education, employment, housing and affordable health care services (see Figure ). For instance, an ethno‐epidemiologic study that examined social, structural, and environmental factors that influence periods of injection cessation among marginalized youth who inject drugs in Vancouver, Canada, found that access to harm reduction youth‐focused services, provision of housing, and social support were important factors that influenced injection cessation (Boyd et al., ). A participant in this study reported his residential location in Vancouver's inner‐city drug scene limited his ability to escape the drug scene.…”