She continues, "Unlike with sexual transmission, there is a proven solution here: needle-exchange programs, which provide drug injectors with clean needles, usually in return for their used ones. Needle exchange is the cornerstone of an approach known as harm reduction: making drug use less deadly." Rosenberg notes that clean needles also provide a means to connect drug users with HIV counseling, tests and treatment as well as drug rehabilitation programs.
"Needle exchange is AIDS prevention that works," Rosenberg writes, pointing to recent studies supporting this claim. "All over the world, however, solid evidence in support of needle exchange is trumped by its risky politics. Harm reduction is thought by politicians to muddy the message that drug use is bad; to have authorities handing out needles puts an official stamp of approval on dangerous behavior." With government funding of needle exchange "politically unpopular," Rosenberg says that programs are often operated by non-governmental organizations and "efforts are small, isolated and often undermined by uncooperative police and health departments."
Rosenberg suggests that "Russia needs needle exchange more than any other country: its HIV epidemic is large, one of the fastest-growing in the world, and perhaps the most dominated by injecting drug use" (11/17).
This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. � Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.New York Times Magazine Examines Needle-Exchange ProgramsSource: Medical News Today
: http://alcoholdrugstreatment.info/new-york-times-magazine-examines-needle-exchange-programs


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