(Press-News.org) Congress needs to immediately lift the ban on federal funding for needle exchange programs to counter the threat of HIV outbreaks among injection drug users like the one that has seen an alarming number of new cases erupt in a single rural Indiana county.
So say Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Professor Chris Beyrer, MD, MPH, and Steffanie A. Strathdee, PhD, director of the Institute of Global Health at the University of California-San Diego, in a commentary published online June 24 in The New England Journal of Medicine.
"There are going to be more of these outbreaks and what's urgently needed is a public health response before things get even worse," says Beyrer, who is also president of the International AIDS Society. "Now is the time to implement needle and syringe exchange programs, wherever they are needed. We can't put politics above public health. We have a cheap tool to prevent this."
The story of Scott County, Ind., a rural region of the state near the Kentucky border, is one that public health officials had feared. In the past decade, the face of drug abuse has changed. No longer is it an exclusively urban, male, African-American problem. It is now mainly concentrated mainly in rural white communities and roughly equally among men and women.
Often, they start out abusing prescription drugs, sometimes by mouth but often by injection, which then can be a gateway to heroin. In 25 states, over-the-counter syringe purchase is illegal without a prescription. Across the country, in states where needle exchanges are legal, programs are prohibited from using federal funds due to a ban that was lifted, in 2009, and then reinstated by Congress in 2011. It's a recipe ripe for HIV and hepatitis C infections to be transmitted quickly through a community, the researchers say.
Southeast Indiana had previously recorded only about five new cases of HIV a year. By June 10 of this year, 169 people had been newly diagnosed and more than 80 percent were also infected with the hepatitis C virus.
Needle exchanges are illegal in Indiana.
The state's governor has made an exception to allow for needle exchanges in the affected county, but says he will only allow other counties to start programs once they show a need.
"Regrettably in the case of NEPs [needle exchange programs], other Indiana counties contemplating authorizing them must first demonstrate the existence of a public health emergency - a requirement that ensures that they can only respond to, rather than prevent, new outbreaks," they write.
Another troubling aspect, the authors note, is that to get clean needles, people must give their initials and date of birth, a registration process that could deter use. And the programs are only open until 6 p.m. most evenings.
Other ways to counter the epidemic, Beyrer says, are to screen more people for HIV and ask them about their drug use, including white women, a demographic that may have been overlooked in prior screening. Beyrer says poor screening efforts mean fewer people in treatment for HIV. Identifying those with HIV earlier can lead to earlier treatment and suppression of viral load, making those with HIV less infectious to others.
Greater use of opioid replacement therapies - that is, replacing those drugs with methadone and buprenorphine, which are less dangerous - could also aid the battle.
These types of actions have worked in the past, Beyrer says. An explosive HIV outbreak among injection drug users that hit Vancouver, British Columbia, was controlled by the expansion of needle exchange programs, providing opioid replacement therapy and providing highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) free of charge through Canada's universal health care system.
"Drug use is changing and before this gets any worse, we need to change our approach to fighting it," Beyrer says.
INFORMATION:
"Threading the Needle - How to Stop the HIV Outbreak in Rural Indiana" was written by Steffanie A. Strathdee and Chris Beyrer.
DALLAS, June 24, 2015 -- Nearly half of Hispanic adults were unaware they have high cholesterol, and less than a third receive any kind of cholesterol treatment, in a new study in Journal of the American Heart Association.
Hispanics are one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in America, with 52 million among the U.S. population, yet their awareness and management of high cholesterol lags behind other ethnic groups. Educating Hispanics/Latinos about the importance of maintaining healthy cholesterol levels could have a significant public health impact on reducing the ...
COLUMBIA, Mo. - When older adults transfer between nursing homes and hospitals, inefficient and unclear communication between the organizations can hinder patient care. Now, a team of MU researchers is working to improve patients' health outcomes by increasing efficient, secure communication between nursing homes and hospitals using an electronic communication system called a health information exchange (HIE).
"The exchange of accurate, complete and timely information between hospitals and nursing homes can be complicated when older adults transfer from one place to another," ...
Putnam Valley, N.Y. (June 24, 2015) - Cell transplantation researchers have successfully used bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) to treat a variety of diseases and conditions. Now, using injections of MSCs, a research team in Brazil has successfully treated laboratory rats modeled with severe burns. They found that the MSCs accelerated healing, enhanced local blood supply, affected the immune system in a positive way, secreted beneficial growth factors with anti-inflammatory properties, and ultimately provided higher survival rates than in control animals ...
Urinary tract and sexually transmitted infections in women are misdiagnosed by emergency departments nearly half the time, according to a paper in the Journal of Clinical Microbiology, a publication of the American Society for Microbiology. These misdiagnoses result in overuse of antibiotics, and increased antibiotic resistance, according to Michelle Hecker, MD, an assistant professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, MetroHealth Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, and her collaborators.
"Less than half the women ...
Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have discovered an immense cloud of hydrogen dubbed "The Behemoth" bleeding from a planet orbiting a nearby star. The enormous, comet-like feature is about 50 times the size of the parent star. The hydrogen is evaporating from a warm, Neptune-sized planet, due to extreme radiation from the star.
This phenomenon has never been seen around an exoplanet so small. It may offer clues to how other planets with hydrogen-enveloped atmospheres could have their outer layers evaporated by their parent star, leaving behind solid, rocky ...
Cystic fibrosis is more deadly for Hispanic than non-Hispanic patients, a disparity that is not explained by differences in their access to health care, according to a new study from the Stanford University School of Medicine.
The study, published online June 18 in Chest, tracked more than 1,700 California residents with cystic fibrosis. Between 1991 and 2010, Hispanic CF patients were almost three times as likely to die as non-Hispanic CF patients, the study found. The gap in survival existed in spite of the fact that both groups visited CF specialty clinics equally ...
Glowing corals that display a surprising array of colours have been discovered in the deep water reefs of the Red Sea by scientists from the University of Southampton, UK, Tel Aviv University and the Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences (IUI), Israel, together with an international team of researchers.
The researchers, whose findings have been published online today in research journal PLOS ONE, hope that some of the coral pigments could be developed into new imaging tools for medical applications.
The team studied corals at depths of more than 50 metres and ...
Vitamin B12 tweaks how genes behave in the facial bacteria of some people who normally enjoy clear skin. The activity changes of the facial bacteria promote inflammation and lead to pimples.
By shedding light on one mechanism behind B12's role in acne, the UCLA finding may identify drug targets that lead to new treatments for acne.
Huiying Li, an assistant professor of molecular and medical pharmacology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, and Dr. Noah Craft, a dermatologist at LA BioMed at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, are available for interviews.
Science ...
On the hunt for better cancer screening tests, Johns Hopkins scientists led a proof of principle study that successfully identified tumor DNA shed into the blood and saliva of 93 patients with head and neck cancer. A report on the findings is published in the June 24 issue of Science Translational Medicine.
"We have shown that tumor DNA in the blood or saliva can successfully be measured for these cancers," says Nishant Agrawal, M.D., associate professor of otolaryngology -- head and neck surgery -- and of oncology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "In ...
Various diagnostic imaging techniques are currently used for clinical imaging/disease diagnosis. The accuracy of diagnosis is mainly based on the type of energy used (such as X-ray, sound waves, photons and positrons) to derive the visual information, as well as the degree of spatial resolution (mesoscopic or microscopic) and the level of information that can be obtained (physiological, anatomical or molecular). Based on potential health hazards imposed by type of energy used, clinical imaging modalities can be broadly categorized as ionizing and non-ionizing modalities. ...