Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - Indonesia: Specter Of AIDS Looming Over Indonesia
Title:Indonesia: Specter Of AIDS Looming Over Indonesia
Published On:2000-03-08
Source:Jakarta Post (Indonesia)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 01:09:19
SPECTER OF AIDS LOOMING OVER INDONESIA

BOGOR, West Java (JP): All across the entire greater Jakarta area the
nightmare of addiction has fully awakened. We are now face to face with the
haunting reality of addiction and addicts: HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C.

There is no escape, there is nowhere to run, there is nowhere to hide. The
nightmare is real, and the crisis of the addiction nightmare is as
horrifying as your imagination can perceive. The epidemic of addiction and
addicts and the pandemic of HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis stretches from Batam to
Irian Jaya.

Promoting and emphasizing "drug supply reduction strategies" has not stopped
addiction or these diseases from spreading into and across our communities.

The current estimation of people abusing drugs, and people who are addicted
to drugs is now rapidly approaching 2 million.

Each and every day now at Yayasan Harapan Permata Hati Kita in Bogor,
parents bring their children, boys and girls, into our recovery center. The
fear, frustrations, tears and anger spill forth from the hearts, minds and
lips of each of these parents. The young addicts sit quietly, staring at the
floor, or playing with their fingers, and hating to have been brought to
this place. Yet these young addicts know their lives have been wrecked by
something: "the drug addiction" they can no longer control.

Yayasan Kita has only been open since last July. We have accepted 72 addicts
and junkies into the Program for Detoxification, Treatment, Recovery and
Aftercare. Of these 72 young (the ages range between 16 and 42) male and
female junkies, 53 (more than 73 percent) tested Hepatitis C positive (a
virus that with time causes cirrhosis and cancer of the liver). Eight have
tested positive for HIV/AIDS. There is no cure for either virus. These
viruses are highly contagious, and both are deadly. The numbers and
percentage of this nightmare grows daily.

These viruses are mostly spread by sharing needles and having unprotected
sex.

IDUs (Intravenous Drug Users -- people who are injecting drugs with needles)
are becoming more and more common. More than 60 percent of the putaw addicts
are now estimated to be IDUs. Drug abusers and addicts who use and share
needles are the most susceptible to becoming infected with the HIV/AIDS and
Hepatitis viruses. Drug users, abusers and addicts are now considered to be
in the ultra high risk group.

We have had to look these young people in the eye and tell them: "not only
are you an addict, you also have Hepatitis C, or you have Hepatitis C and
HIV/AIDS." At first what you see in their juvenile eyes is disbelief. All
time stops and freezes, then fear comes, then the tragic horror and truth of
the nightmare sets in as they begin to realize that what we have just told
them is: "you have an incurable virus, and it is going to kill you".

We have to tell these addicts that they need to stop using drugs, any drugs.
Because continued use of drugs will aggravate their conditions. Recent
studies in the U.S. have found that cocaine and shabu-shabu (crystal
methamphetamine) speed up the replication process of these viruses. Alcohol
is toxic to people, especially addicts, who have any type of liver disease.
We have to look the parents in the eye, exactly the same as we do with their
children, and tell them the same thing: "Your son or daughter has Hepatitis
C, or HIV/AIDS." The parents immediately stare into empty space, lose their
breath, and all energy drains from their bodies; they slump down, limp from
the words, and the tears begin to flow.

They ask us to repeat what we just said. They ask us to explain what we
said, and explain what Hepatitis and HIV/AIDS is, and what each virus does.
The reality of these moments lasts a lifetime. This diagnosis is now
becoming a daily occurrence at our center. Each time we have to tell someone
they have Hepatitis or the HIV/AIDS Virus is heartbreaking for everyone. It
never gets easier, only more difficult.

Most Indonesians truly do not understand the severity of addiction and
addicts, or HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis, as of yet. The number of addicts is
rapidly increasing, so are the reported cases of HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis.
Statistics are only barely beginning to begin to record the number of people
that have been tested, and are found to be HIV positive, those that have
died, and are dying from AIDS.

Indonesia really does not report the number of deaths caused by drug
overdoses (usually from Putaw/heroin), even though many young people are
dying daily from overdoses.

Much is being shared today about drugs, addiction and these viruses in
Indonesia. Still, hardly anyone truly understands what to do with addicts.
This is a large part of the reason addiction is such a nightmare.

Parents and the general public think that detoxification, or a short-term
stay in some hospital or institution, or counseling in some drop-in center
will cure their child of addiction. Parents spend millions of rupiah on
detoxification, then spend millions more on medication.

Parents do this over and over again, hoping in vain something, anything,
will cure their children from this nightmare. Yet it does not work because
addiction is not simply a physical condition. It is a physical, mental,
emotional and spiritual condition. And because basic detoxification does not
stop or cure the addiction, the nightmare continues and becomes worse.

Residential treatment programs, community-based self-help programs and the
12-step program of Narcotics Anonymous are the best ways to combat addiction
today. HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis must be dealt with in the same way, because
those involved at the core have the best, most current knowledge and
information available for addicts, infected addicts and their families.
Indonesia has run out of time for both hope and guess-work. This is the time
for combined and community action. Anything else, other than action only
helps the nightmare to spread.

- - The writers are program directors at the Yayasan Harapan Permata Hati Kita
Recovery Center in Bogor, West Java.
Member Comments
No member comments available...