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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MD: Heroin Addicts' Infection Rate High
Title:US MD: Heroin Addicts' Infection Rate High
Published On:2002-12-05
Source:Baltimore Sun (MD)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 18:03:06
HEROIN ADDICTS' INFECTION RATE HIGH

Nearly half of heroin addicts in Baltimore's drug treatment programs are
unaware that they suffer from chronic blood infections such as HIV and
hepatitis, according to a study by the Johns Hopkins School of Public
Health. Despite the disturbing picture of health problems associated with
addiction, the researchers said the city has an excellent chance to reduce
the toll through its methadone maintenance centers. Officials with the Open
Society Institute, the foundation that paid for the study, said the
methadone centers should screen clients for blood-borne infections and
refer those who need care to clinics.

"You want to break down the barriers between drug treatment and the health
care system," said Dr. Robert Schwartz, an addictions specialist with OSI.

Researchers found that nearly two out of three addicts were infected with
hepatitis C, a chronic infection that can eventually trigger liver failure
and cancer. Only one-third of those infected knew it. Meanwhile, one in
five addicts were infected with HIV. Eighty percent were aware they were
infected, presumably because HIV testing is widely available and encouraged
by public health campaigns. Only 3 percent were infected with syphilis.
Researchers credited the city Health Department's campaign in the mid-1990s
with curbing what was then a serious syphilis epidemic.

In the two-year study, OSI paid for case managers at the clinics who
referred infected addicts for medical care. About 2,000 addicts were
vaccinated against hepatitis B.

The researchers and OSI recommended that the treatment centers offer free
testing for HIV, syphilis, and hepatitis B and C, using state laboratory
services. They also urged treatment centers to seek federal funding for
hepatitis B vaccines. The clinics should refer patients to federally funded
community health centers and the city clinics that treat STDs, the study
said. An unanswered question, however, is how to pay for the services -
particularly hepatitis C treatment, which can cost as much as $35,000.
Federal funding is fragmented and scarce.
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