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Drug Use & HIV
How Does Drug Use Relate To
HIV?
(courtesy of www.aids.org)
For
more information on HIV and AIDS, click here to visit
www.aids.org
Drug use is a major factor
in the spread of HIV infection. Shared equipment for
using drugs can carry HIV and hepatitis, and drug
use is linked with unsafe sexual activity.
Drug use can also be dangerous
for people who are taking anti-HIV medications. Drug
users are less likely to take all of their medications,
and street drugs may have dangerous interactions with
HIV medications.
Injection
and HIV Infection
HIV infection spreads easily
when people share equipment to use drugs. Sharing
equipment also spreads hepatitis B, hepatitis C, and
other serious diseases.
Infected blood can be drawn
up into a syringe and then get injected along with
the drug by the next user of the syringe. This is
the easiest way to transmit HIV during drug use because
infected blood goes directly into someone's bloodstream.
Even small amounts of blood
on cookers, filters, tourniquets, or in rinse water
can be enough to infect another user. Blood on your
hands - even small amounts - can also be dangerous
when you help someone else find a vein, steady their
arm, or when you pass equipment.
To reduce the risk of HIV
and hepatitis infection, never share any equipment
used with drugs, and keep washing your hands. Carefully
clean your cookers and the site you will use for injection.
A recent study showed that
HIV can survive in a used syringe for at least 4 weeks.
If you have to re-use equipment, you can reduce the
risk of infection by cleaning it between users. If
possible, re-use your own syringe. It still should
be cleaned because bacteria can
grow in it.
The most effective way to
clean a syringe is to use water first, then bleach
and a final water rinse. Try to get all blood out
of the syringe by shaking vigorously for 30 seconds.
Use cold water because hot water can make the blood
form clots. To kill most HIV and hepatitis C virus,
leave bleach in the syringe for two full minutes.
Cleaning does not always kill HIV or hepatitis. Always
use a new syringe if possible.
Needle Exchange Programs
Some communities have started
needle exchange programs to give free, clean syringes
to people so they won't need to share. These programs
are controversial because some people think they promote
drug use. But research on needle exchange shows that
this is not true. Rates of HIV infection go down where
there are needle exchange programs, and more drug
users sign up for treatment programs.
Needle exchange programs are
legal in New Mexico. Call the New Mexico AIDS Hotline
at (800) 545-2437 for the location of legal needle
exchange programs in New Mexico. The North American
Syringe Exchange Network has a web page listing several
needle exchange programs at:
http://www.nasen.org
(USA)
http://www.harmreduction.org
(USA and Canada)
Drug Use And Unsafe Sex
For a lot of people, drugs
and sex go together. Drug users might trade sex for
drugs. Some people think that sexual activity is more
enjoyable when they are using drugs.
Drug use, including alcohol,
increases the chance that people will not protect
themselves during sexual activity. Someone who is
trading sex for drugs might find it difficult to set
limits on what they are willing to do. Anyone using
drugs is less likely to remember about using protection,
or to care about it.
Medications And Drugs
It is very important to take
every dose of anti-HIV medications. People who are
not adherent (miss doses) are more likely to have
higher levels of HIV in their blood, and to develop
resistance to their medications. Drug use is linked
with poor adherence, which can lead to treatment failure.
Some street drugs interact
with medications. The liver breaks down some medications
used to fight HIV, especially the protease inhibitors
and the non-nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase
inhibitors. It also breaks down some recreational
drugs, including alcohol. When drugs and medications
are both "in line"
to use the liver, they might both be processed much
more slowly. This can lead to a serious overdose of
the medication or of the recreational drug.
An overdose of a medication
can cause serious side effects. An overdose of a recreational
drug can be deadly. At least one death of a person
with HIV has been blamed on mixing a protease inhibitor
with the recreational drug Ecstasy.
The Bottom Line
Drug use is a major cause
of new HIV infections. Shared equipment can spread
HIV, hepatitis and other diseases. Recreational drug
use, including alcohol, contributes to unsafe sexual
activities.
To protect yourself from infection,
never re-use any equipment for using drugs. Even if
you re-use your own syringes, clean them thoroughly
between times. Cleaning is only partly effective.
In some communities, needle
exchange programs provide free, new syringes. These
programs reduce the rate of new HIV infections.
Drug use can lead to missed
doses of anti-HIV medications. This increases the
chances of treatment failure and resistance to medications.
Mixing recreational drugs
and anti-HIV medications can be dangerous. Drug interactions
can cause serious side effects or dangerous overdoses.
For
more information on HIV and AIDS, click here to visit
www.aids.org
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