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Related: New HIV/AIDS data reveal grave situation for Asia-Pacific children
KOBE, Japan, July 3 (Xinhuanet) -- Countries in
Asia-Pacific region have been urged to speed up providing services to protect
people using drugs from HIV infection because injecting drug use is one of the
major driving factors behind the regional epidemics.
According to key presentations and reports released
during the 7th International Congress on AIDS in Asia and the Pacific
(ICAAP)being held on July 1-5 in Kobe, west Japan, much of the current spread of
HIV in Asian countries is attributable to injecting drug use, and there are
signs that it is playing a bigger role in China and India's epidemics than
previously thought.
In Indonesia, Nepal and Vietnam, rapid rises in HIV
infection among drug injectors recently also appear to have spurred subsequent
rises in HIV infection among non-injectors who have sexual risk behaviors, thus
"kick-starting" wider epidemics.
"Drug-related intervention programs must be scaled
up," said JVR Prasada Rao, regional director of the Regional Support Team ofthe
Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
"There are some individual success stories here and
there. But in terms of coverage, still the population of drug users who are
covered is very low," he said.
Unfortunately, this mirrors the situation in much of
the Asia Pacific region where injection-related HIV epidemics are
currentlyraging.
"We have more than enough evidence that AIDS in Asia
is driven largely by populations of injecting drugs users, due to high levels of
needle sharing," added Tariq Zafar, keynote ICAAP speaker from Nai Zindagi, a
nongovernmental organization providingstreet-based services for drug users in
Pakistan.
"Although abstinence from drugs is the final way out,
not all who inject and share are ready for abstinence -- nor do they have access
to drug treatment services. For the rest, there needs to bea way to prevent them
from sharing or even injecting," he said.
The Kobe Congress has brought together the latest
information and opinions linking drug use and the Asia Pacific HIV/AIDS
epidemic, but according to some delegates, the significance of drug use as the
key "engine" for HIV/AIDS in the region has been understood for some time.
Executive Director of the Asian Harm Reduction
Network Ton Smits said some of the new data at the conference is important in
identifying the spread of HIV from drug users into the broader community, but
that what is urgently needed is action from those governments who have already
made a commitment to acting on the crisis.
"What we are hearing this week are further important
pieces in the evidence puzzle, but is not really telling us anything we didn't
already know," said Smits. "What we need is urgent action from the governments
and other institutions that have made explicit commitments to do something about
the crisis engulfing people using drugs in Asia," he said.
Due of its proximity to the major producers of the
world's illegal heroin, and because of entrenched poverty in many places, Asia
is home to the largest populations of injecting drug users inthe world.
According to UN statistics, in 2004, for example,
opium cultivation in Afghanistan grew by 64 percent, which promises increased
trafficking and a steady supply of high-grade heroin forthe Asia Pacific region
as well as other countries.
Because of the difficulties people face in stopping
using drugs,and because other detoxification or treatment services are often
scarce, a more pragmatic approach is to reduce the impact and risk-associated
effects of drug use.
"Harm reduction" is about reducing the harms of drug
use, both to drug users and the wider community, without necessarily reducing
drug consumption, said Smits.
One element of harm reduction is "substitution
therapy" -- a treatment approach that helps opium-related drug users to reduce
the withdrawal symptoms and craving when drug use is stopped or reduced.
Methadone is one of the oral medications used for the
substitution therapy, Smits suggested. Because users taking methadone are far
less likely to inject drugs, it also has a significant impact on reducing their
risk of HIV infection.
On the eve of the ICAAP congress, the World Health
Organization(WHO) announced that it had added methadone to the WHO List of
Essential Medicines -- a roster of drugs endorsed by WHO, and recommended for
basic use by health services throughout the world.
"This is important," said Peter Piot, executive
director of theUNAIDS. "Nations who want to provide methadone in their programs
will now have easier access."
ICAAP delegates are also keen to broaden the way harm
reductionservices are viewed. Rao argued that programs have to be more
comprehensive, since needle and syringe exchange and methadone substitution are
important, but just one part of the harm reduction and treatment continuum.
"I think you have to look at several of these
elements and put them together in the form of a package," he said.
Five to 10 percent of the world's HIV infections are
reportedlydue to injection drug use. But HIV/AIDS transmission among people
injecting drugs and their social networks is preventable, and there is evidence
that HIV among this group has a large effect on the dynamics of HIV spread, and
so the control of HIV in the general population also needs HIV prevention among
injection drug users.
"Closing our eyes to these marginalized populations
and behaviors will not make them go away," said Karen Stanecki, who leads the
Monitoring the AIDS Pandemic group of leading AIDS experts. "Supporting
prevention services for these populations will reduce their risk to HIV and will
help prevent the spread to the wider population." Enditem |