Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries

Background: About a third of the global HIV infections outside sub-Saharan Africa are related to injecting drug use (IDU), and this accounts for a growing proportion of persons living with HIV. This paper is a response to the need to monitor the state of the HIV epidemic as it relates to IDU and the...

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Main Authors: Petersen, Z., Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn, van Hout, M.C., Plüddemann, A., Parry, C.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85726
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author Petersen, Z.
Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn
van Hout, M.C.
Plüddemann, A.
Parry, C.
author_facet Petersen, Z.
Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn
van Hout, M.C.
Plüddemann, A.
Parry, C.
author_sort Petersen, Z.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: About a third of the global HIV infections outside sub-Saharan Africa are related to injecting drug use (IDU), and this accounts for a growing proportion of persons living with HIV. This paper is a response to the need to monitor the state of the HIV epidemic as it relates to IDU and the availability of HIV treatment and harm reduction services in 21 high epidemic countries. Methods: A data collection form was designed to cover questions on rates of IDU, prevalence and incidence of HIV and information on HIV treatment and harm reduction services available to people who inject drugs (PWID). National and regional data on HIV infection, IDU in the form of reports and journal articles were sought from key informants in conjunction with a systematic search of the literature. Results: Completed data collection forms were received for 11 countries. Additional country-specific information was sourced via the literature search. The overall proportion of HIV positive PWID in the selected countries ranged from 3% in Kazakhstan to 58% in Vietnam. While IDU is relatively rare in sub-Saharan Africa, it is the main driver of HIV in Mauritius and Kenya, with roughly 47% and 36% of PWID respectively being HIV positive. All countries had antiretroviral treatment (ART) available to PWID, but data on service coverage were mainly missing. By the end of 2010, uptake of needle and syringe programmes (NSP) in Bangladesh, India and Slovakia reached the internationally recommended target of 200 syringes per person, while uptake in Kazakhstan, Vietnam and Tajikistan reached between 100-200 syringes per person. The proportion of PWID receiving opioid substitution therapy (OST) ranged from 0.1% in Kazakhstan to 32.8% in Mauritius, with coverage of less than 3% for most countries. Conclusions: In order to be able to monitor the impact of HIV treatment and harm reduction services for PWID on the epidemic, epidemiological data on IDU and harm reduction service provision to PWID needs to be regularly collected using standardised indicators. © 2013 Petersen et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-857262021-10-07T04:12:49Z Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries Petersen, Z. Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn van Hout, M.C. Plüddemann, A. Parry, C. Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Substance Abuse Injecting drug use People who inject drugs Harm reduction HIV prevention USERS ACCESS CARE Background: About a third of the global HIV infections outside sub-Saharan Africa are related to injecting drug use (IDU), and this accounts for a growing proportion of persons living with HIV. This paper is a response to the need to monitor the state of the HIV epidemic as it relates to IDU and the availability of HIV treatment and harm reduction services in 21 high epidemic countries. Methods: A data collection form was designed to cover questions on rates of IDU, prevalence and incidence of HIV and information on HIV treatment and harm reduction services available to people who inject drugs (PWID). National and regional data on HIV infection, IDU in the form of reports and journal articles were sought from key informants in conjunction with a systematic search of the literature. Results: Completed data collection forms were received for 11 countries. Additional country-specific information was sourced via the literature search. The overall proportion of HIV positive PWID in the selected countries ranged from 3% in Kazakhstan to 58% in Vietnam. While IDU is relatively rare in sub-Saharan Africa, it is the main driver of HIV in Mauritius and Kenya, with roughly 47% and 36% of PWID respectively being HIV positive. All countries had antiretroviral treatment (ART) available to PWID, but data on service coverage were mainly missing. By the end of 2010, uptake of needle and syringe programmes (NSP) in Bangladesh, India and Slovakia reached the internationally recommended target of 200 syringes per person, while uptake in Kazakhstan, Vietnam and Tajikistan reached between 100-200 syringes per person. The proportion of PWID receiving opioid substitution therapy (OST) ranged from 0.1% in Kazakhstan to 32.8% in Mauritius, with coverage of less than 3% for most countries. Conclusions: In order to be able to monitor the impact of HIV treatment and harm reduction services for PWID on the epidemic, epidemiological data on IDU and harm reduction service provision to PWID needs to be regularly collected using standardised indicators. © 2013 Petersen et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85726 10.1186/1477-7517-10-13 English http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ BMC fulltext
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Substance Abuse
Injecting drug use
People who inject drugs
Harm reduction
HIV prevention
USERS
ACCESS
CARE
Petersen, Z.
Myers-Franchi, Bronwyn
van Hout, M.C.
Plüddemann, A.
Parry, C.
Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries
title Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries
title_full Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries
title_fullStr Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries
title_full_unstemmed Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries
title_short Availability of HIV prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: Findings from 21 countries
title_sort availability of hiv prevention and treatment services for people who inject drugs: findings from 21 countries
topic Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Substance Abuse
Injecting drug use
People who inject drugs
Harm reduction
HIV prevention
USERS
ACCESS
CARE
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/85726