Drug users must be decriminalized along with scale-up of combination
treatment and changes to drug control
http://www.physorg.com/news198828531.html
July 20, 2010

In a paper in The Lancet Series on HIV in people who use drugs, a call
to action is made by experts who say that while scale-up of various
interventions outlined in earlier papers are vital, these are not
enough. Drug users should be decriminalised, along with other changes
in policy on drug control and law enforcement. The paper is by
Professor Chris Beyrer, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health, Baltimore, MD, USA, and colleagues.

The authors highlight that it is possible to control HIV epidemics in
people who use drugs with currently available strategies, such as
opioid substitution (OST), needle and syringe programmes (NSP), and
antiretroviral treatment (ART). The evidence backs a massive scale-up
of all three in combination. Now is the time, say the authors, for
countries to realise that national harm-reduction policies, programmes
and services are desperately needed; failure to act or continuing with
inadequate pilot programmes will not prevent the HIV epidemic in drug
users advancing.

The authors say: "The dangers of inaction in meeting the needs of
people who use drugs include continuing spread of HIV infection in new
populations and regions, increased complexity of HIV-1 epidemics at
molecular levels, decreased access to opioids for pain management and
palliative care, and the human, family, health, and social costs of
mass incarceration and detention."

They add: "Expanded action and advocacy by health professionals on
behalf of people who use drugs are urgently needed in both health-care
and criminal justice sectors. Health professionals should not be
complicit in programmes and policies that have no evidence base or
that violate human rights. The voice of people who use drugs
themselves needs to be heard at all levels, from service delivery to
policy decision making."

Highlighting that reform of justice systems is a large part of harm
reduction, the authors call for decriminalisation of drug users, along
with legal services and access to health services for people who use
drugs in all forms of prison and detention. They say: "If drug control
sectors and law enforcement are not a part of new approaches, then
harm-reduction programmes will be closed, substitution clinics will
stay sparsely attended, and ART and preventive interventions will have
a low uptake by drug users."

They conclude: "Only around 10% of people who use drugs worldwide are
being reached [by current treatment programmes], and far too many are
imprisoned for minor offences or detained without trial. To change
this situation will take commitment, advocacy, and political courage
to advance the action agenda. Failure to do so will exacerbate the
spread of HIV infection, undermine treatment programmes, and continue
to expand prison populations with patients in need of care."


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