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Fact Sheet: Antiretroviral Treatment for Injecting Drug Users

Date:
August 2008
Source:
OSI

Injecting drug users (IDUs) comprise the largest share of HIV cases in 20 nations of Asia and the former Soviet Union, including China and Russia. Yet as these countries move to make HIV treatment more available, IDUs remain disproportionately less likely to have access to antiretroviral treatment (ARV). Reasons for this inequality include misconceptions about the impact of drug use on treatment adherence, denial of basic supports such as methadone that would facilitate HIV treatment, stigma in health care settings, and emphasis on incarceration and punishment of IDUs rather than on their care.

Published by OSI's International Harm Reduction Development Program, this fact sheet discusses the benefits and tools of ARV for IDUs. The fact sheet is available for download below, as is a fully footnoted version.

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Antiretroviral Treatment for Injecting Drug Users
PDF Document - 51K
Download the fact sheet.

Antiretroviral Treatment for Injecting Drug Users (Footnoted Version)
PDF Document - 67K
Download the fact sheet including footnotes.

Antiretroviral Treatment for Injecting Drug Users (Russian Version)
PDF Document - 114K
Download the Russian fact sheet including footnotes.

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Related Information

Fact Sheet: Saving Lives by Reducing Harm—HIV Prevention and Treatment for Injecting Drug Users
August 2006
This OSI fact sheet describes the roles of sterile syringe programs, opiate substitution therapy, HIV treatment, sexual health services, human rights protections, peer support, and community mobilization in reducing the harms of injection drug use.

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