Breaking the Chains? How Police Practices Are Constraining HIV Efforts

December 10, 2010 | by

Today in Malaysia, Professor Adeeba Kamarulzaman welcomed HIV experts and government officials to the Asian launch of a special series of articles in the Lancet on HIV and people who use drugs.  While recognizing Malaysia’s marked progress—methadone was piloted here in 2005, needle exchange began in 2006, and prescription of methadone to soon-to-be-released prisoners started in 2008—Kamarulzaman acknowledged there was still work to be done. More than 2,500 people had been arrested in and around needle exchange programs last year, she noted, many for carrying a used syringe or a small amount of drugs. As one Malaysia peer educator has put it, “harm reduction is a sand castle. Community builds it up, and law enforcement tears it down.”

This is not Malaysia’s problem alone.  In Ukraine, authorities tightened the drug control policies last month, announcing that anyone found with drug residue in a used syringe would be sent to prison, and leaving needle exchange programs wondering whether they are vulnerable to prosecution. The Transnational Institute and the Washington Institute on Latin America released a report today finding that prison systems in eight Latin American countries had been swamped by low-level drug offenders, while drug traffickers continued to go free.  In China, where the government has been rightly saluted for increasing the availability of the medication methadone, more than three times as many people are in drug detention centers where they’re offered the “treatment” of forced labor for 16 hours a day.  In Vietnam, there are more than 10 times as many people in punitive forced labor facilities as on methadone.

The medical literature is full of studies that have sought to answer the question of how to increase access to HIV prevention and treatment for injection drug users.  Does peer-based needle exchange work?  If patients get preloaded pillboxes or work with case managers, will they take more of their HIV medicines? Does prescription of medicines like methadone or buprenorphine to reduce drug cravings also improve ability to get and stay on antiretroviral treatment?  The answer to all of these has turned out to be yes, though the discussion today in Malaysia and the reports from Ukraine and Latin America remind us that all this attention to the individual may be missing the real cause of treatment interruptions.  Too often, we blame patients for system failures—particularly failures of a law enforcement system that treats people like illicit drugs, as something to be controlled and contained, rather than as people deserving of dignity, treatment, and care.

Change is possible.  In Malaysia, the expert meeting was attended also by the Deputy Director of Malaysia’s Anti-Drugs Agency, Dr. Professor Mahmood Nazar, who announced that Malaysia has shifted resources from compulsory drug detention to voluntary drug treatment.  Another expert, Dr. Steffanie Strathdee, produced findings suggesting that in Odessa, Ukraine, up to one fifth of HIV infections would be eliminated if we prevented police beatings (by extension, we can assume the same holds true in other regions with high rates of police violence against people who use drugs).

In multiple countries in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, the Open Society Public Health Program is supporting efforts to integrate lawyers with harm reduction programs.  For people who use drugs, access to justice may be as crucial as a condom, a clean needle, or antiretroviral treatment.

This month, the UN’s reference group on injection drug use and HIV, which includes experts from more than 26 countries, issued its consensus statement on key issues for action. Among them was the clear call for an end to imprisonment for people who have committed no other crime than drug use or possession of drugs for personal use.  Drug detention and prison, where HIV medicines and needles are rarely available and where risk behavior and disease-producing conditions are common, are bad for public health.  The sooner national governments take up the expert consensus and get police out of health care and drug users out of detention, the sooner universal access to HIV prevention and treatment for people who use drugs will move from aspirational goal to achievable reality.

Complex flavor chemistry makes chocolate flavor stronger despite lower fat.

Emerging Food R&D Report October 1, 1999 A University of Missouri taste test found no significant difference in the flavor of low-fat versus regular chocolate ice cream-a bonus that may be unique to chocolate ice creams due to the complex mix of chemicals that make up that distinctive flavor. Investigators next want to test fruit-flavored ice cream to see what impact varying fat levels have on its taste and texture.

Scientists at the university (Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, 122 Eckles Hall, Columbia, MO 65211) targeted chocolate because the popular flavor had not previously been studied. After vanilla, chocolate is the second favorite ice cream flavor in the U.S. Since the reduction of fat in vanilla ice creams resulted in a less smooth and harsher taste, and people disliked it more, researchers wondered if that also would be true for chocolate ice cream. go to web site chocolate ice cream recipe

A single chemical compound carries the flavor of vanilla. By contrast, the flavor of chocolate is found in a mixture of many chemicals. It's this complexity that helps make chocolate less susceptible to flavor degradation. In fact, chocolate may be used to cover up off-flavors. It's a masking flavor.

The chocolate ice cream study was conducted with the help of untrained and trained testers. In the study, researchers found that people like the 0.5% non-fat ice cream just as much as they like the full-fat (9% milk fat) chocolate ice cream. Trained panelists found that the intensity of the flavor varied with the fat content, which is akin to the difference between milk chocolate and dark or semi-bitter chocolate. But a collective thumbs-up by a much larger group of untrained survey participants showed they didn't think that difference mattered much. go to site chocolate ice cream recipe

The same is not necessarily true for strawberry ice cream, however, according to a study done at the University of Helsinki, Finland. Researchers there found the taste of fat-free strawberry ice cream differed significantly in taste from the regular version. For health-conscious chocolate ice cream lovers, the Missouri study is good news. When it comes to chocolate ice cream, the decision to buy a good-tasting ice cream is independent of the fat content.

Further information. Ingolf Gruen; phone: 573-882-6746; fax: 573-882-0596.

4 Comments to “Breaking the Chains? How Police Practices Are Constraining HIV Efforts”

  1. On December 20th, 2010 at 2:32 pm, John Burton said:

    It is bad enough that we treat users as criminals and then compound the problem with overzealous police stupidity is off the chart. Legalize drugs and use the profits to help those who want to kick their habits.

  2. I was a drug law enforcer. drug users are sick people and should be recognized as a patient needing care and treatment. I have seen 50 years of drug enforcement. It has not worked. Does not work. And will not work. All these harassment by the Police and other law enforcers not only undermine Harm Reduction efforts but create more social problems; crimes, smuggling and control of the drug supply by criminal gangs. Decriminalization of possession of drugs for will be more beneficial than enforcement.

    • On April 20th, 2011 at 7:40 am, Mr. Lee Hertel said:

      Mr. Khan,

      I applaud your statement. More law enforcement personnel, including judges and public defenders are speaking up and speaking out. I live in Minneapolis, Minnesota and volunteer with a syringe exchange program that is overseen by our local HIV prevention and services agency. I am constantly shocked by the ignorance of local police officers.

      Thank you for having the courage to speak out.

      Sincerely,
      Lee Hertel

  3. es una pena, que a pesar de existir evidencias cientifica, exista obstaculo en tantos paises para que el usuario de drogas reciba los programa de reduccion de daños, la represion policial solo fomenta practicas de riesgo, beneficios de un grupo que regula la existencia de un mercado inlegal, debemos ser racional, pensar logicamente, sin puritanismo artificial, hay un problema que debemos resolver con los enfermo, que no tienen culpa de ser victima de una guerra insensata. !los usuarios de drogas tambien tienen derechos!

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Daniel Wolfe

Daniel Wolfe is Director of the International Harm Reduction Development Program, part of the Open Society Public Health Program.

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