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Needle-Exchange Program Cut Hepatitis C Transmission Rate
06-08-2001
http://www.prn.org/prn_nb_cntnt/oldcaps/cap06-08-01.01.htm
According to a report presented to
the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease, injection drug
users who began injecting drugs after the 1993 legalization of a safe
needle program in San Francisco had a much lower risk of contracting
hepatitis C virus (Hepatitis C Virus) than those who started earlier.
Before any programs were in place, most drug users became infected with
Hepatitis C Virus within a year of injecting drugs. Now there is a delay in primary
infections of 5 to 10 years, providing time for substance abuse
intervention, said Dr. Brian R. Edlin, director of the Urban Health
Study at the University of California, San Francisco and author of the
report.
Of the 969 study participants from neighborhoods in San Francisco,
Oakland and Richmond, 73 percent tested positive for Hepatitis C Virus antibodies.
However, controlling for age, duration of drug use and number of
injections per day, the people who used needle exchange programs as
their main source of needles were half as likely to become infected with
Hepatitis C Virus. In San Francisco, Hepatitis C Virus antibody prevalence fell from 89 percent in
people who started injecting drugs between 1977 and 1985 to 76 percent
in drug users who started between 1986 and 1988-after HIV outreach
programs began. It fell to 59 percent in users who started between 1994
and 1998-when large-scale needle exchange programs were put into effect.
According to Miriam Alter, PhD, a co-moderator at the conference and
chief of hepatitis epidemiology at the CDC, the next step for prevention
programs is addressing practices such as sharing cookers, filters or
rinse water.
Source: Internal
Medicine News (03.15.01) Vol 34; No 6; P 31; Jennifer M Wang; Courtesy
of the CDC National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention.
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