People who use drugs often face stigma and discrimination when trying to get basic health care. Based in St. Petersburg—a city where 70% of HIV cases are the result of injecting drug use—the Humanitarian Action Fund fights for the health and human rights of injecting drug users, as well as other marginalized groups such as sex workers, migrants, and street children.
The organization, a grantee of OSI’s International Harm Reduction Development Program, operates a mobile clinic on a refurbished bus that travels to areas where drug users live and buy drugs. For the last decade, the bus has been a light in the dark, offering clean needles and syringes, alcohol swabs, condoms, psychological counseling, blood testing, basic medical services, and information about safer injecting, HIV, and hepatitis.
In this multimedia piece, founder Sasha Tsekhanovich describes Humanitarian Action’s approach: “not moralization, but an expression of friendship.”
Read a transcript of A Light in the Dark: Health Services for Drug Users in St. Petersburg.