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Britain
rebuffs call to block anti-Aids needle exchanges
Sarah Boseley, health editor
Tuesday June 28, 2005
The
Guardian
The
US is pressing the UN to block the use of needle exchange
programmes in countries where drug use is driving
the spread of Aids, arguing that the schemes encourage
users to continue their habit.
But
critics, including Britain, believe that the fight
against Aids in eastern Europe, central Asia and other
parts of the world could be jeopardised if the US
manages to water down the UN's policy.
The
board of UNAids, the UN agency which coordinates the
fight against the pandemic, is formulating a global
prevention strategy in Geneva. Article continues But
the board may be forced for the first time to a vote
on the issue.
Britain
opposed the US position yesterday, when Gareth Thomas,
the international development minister, told the meeting
in his opening statement that the UK wants to see
"efforts to intensify harm reduction strategies, including
needle and syringe exchange programmes".
He
said: "We support effective harm reduction programmes,
especially needle and syringe exchange and methadone
substitution therapy because they have been proven
to reduce HIV infection among infecting drug users
and their sexual partners in many countries."
The
UK, he said, had "a different approach" from the US.
The
row is critical, because needle sharing by injecting
drug users is the main cause of the soaring figures
for HIV/Aids infection in many countries, and provides
a gateway for the spread of infection into the heterosexual
community through the partners of drug users.
Drug
injecting is responsible for 80% of the cases in eastern
Europe and central Asia, and is also driving the epidemic
in a wide range of countries in the Middle East, north
Africa, south and south-east Asia and Latin America.
HIV prevalence within certain populations of drug
injectors exceeds 80%.
Europe
accepts evidence from studies which have shown needle
exchanges to curb the spread of infection, but the
US, which will not fund such studies domestically,
does not.
The
issue has already become fraught. At a meeting in
Vienna earlier this year the UN agency responsible
for the policing of narcotics, the United Nations
office on drugs and crime, was forced to accept the
US line and oppose needle exchanges.
USAid,
the American development agency, is not permitted
to fund or be involved with programmes that include
needle exchange. Democrats are lobbying against the
government's position.
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