Gray J
NSW Health Department, Sydney, Australia.
Subst Use Misuse. 1998 Apr;33(5):1075-91. doi: 10.3109/10826089809062208.
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) pandemic has swept through injecting drug user (IDU) communities around the world. Once HIV is present in an IDU community, seroprevalence rates escalate rapidly unless immediate and comprehensive prevention methods are put in place. Such measures often include providing IDUs with sterile injecting equipment and dispensing methadone or other opiate substitution formulas. These measures fall under the rubric of harm reduction-an attempt to reduce the harm to drug users, their families, and communities, including preventing or limiting the transmission of HIV and other blood-borne viruses. In Thailand, HIV-1 spread rapidly among IDUs with seroprevalence rates jumping from 1 to 40% in the space of a year. Current incidence rates are estimated at 11 per 100 person years. This paper describes the establishment and implementation of needle and syringe exchanges among injecting drug users in nine Hilltribe communities in Northern Thailand. The exchanges have been operating for between 1 and 3 years and have been effective in limiting the transmission of HIV within these small communities. The needle and syringe exchanges are run by indigenous staff with the cooperation of the community and provide a good example of the feasibility of establishing locally-run, community-based harm reduction programs.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)大流行席卷了全球的注射吸毒者群体。一旦HIV在注射吸毒者群体中出现,血清阳性率会迅速上升,除非立即采取全面的预防措施。这些措施通常包括为注射吸毒者提供无菌注射设备以及分发美沙酮或其他阿片类替代配方。这些措施属于减少伤害的范畴,即试图减少对吸毒者、其家人和社区的伤害,包括预防或限制HIV及其他血源性病毒的传播。在泰国,HIV-1在注射吸毒者中迅速传播,血清阳性率在一年内从1%跃升至40%。目前的发病率估计为每100人年11例。本文描述了泰国北部九个山地部落社区为注射吸毒者建立和实施针头与注射器交换项目的情况。这些交换项目已经运行了1至3年,并且在限制这些小社区内HIV的传播方面取得了成效。针头与注射器交换项目由当地工作人员在社区的合作下开展,为建立当地运行、基于社区的减少伤害项目的可行性提供了一个很好的范例。