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By Harsheth Virk
New Delhi: Asked to do a behavioural survey
among intravenous drug users (IDUs) in the
Indian capital, my first thought was: "Where
am I going to find them?"
But as anyone who cares to look can see,
drug users are right before our eyes. You
meet them everywhere - outside temples,
under flyovers, on the banks of the Yamuna,
in the capital's medieval Mughal buildings
and so on.
Despite this evidence, people ask questions
like "Do people really inject drugs?
Where do they live? Who are they? Why do
they matter?"
Drug users are easy to see but hard to
reach because they tend to use drugs in
places where they will not be reached, either
by law enforcement officials or friends
and acquaintances who might condemn them
for their addiction.
It is the illicit nature of drug use and
its associated stigma that pushes these
people to the fringes - out of the mainstream
gaze.
A group of drug users in Bhopal said: "(We)
mostly consume drugs near very dirty places...
on those streets where police (do) not reach
easily - from where we run easily. We usually
take drugs in (a) narrow pathway - sometimes
people beat us... then we search for another
place to consume drugs."
Contrary to popular belief, most drug users
are not homeless. A recent study done in
24 cities and villages across India found
that 95 percent of them lived at home. Another
study in 2005 found that 62 percent of all
drug users were employed. It was also found
that most drug users were men in the 21-40
year age group.
But drug abuse can seriously affect someone's
ability to work. Habitual drug users are
likely to lose their jobs and to turn to
illegal activities to sustain their habit.
It is clear that drug abuse matters vitally
to the addicts and their families. But it
also matters to everyone else. It matters
because drug users suffer from many illnesses
such as abscesses, sexually transmitted
infections, hepatitis and HIV/AIDS. A recent
study carried out by the UN Office on Drug
and Crime (UNODC) found that nearly one-third
of all IDUs reported an abscess within the
last six months.
Everyone has to bear the economic costs
of these illnesses, more so when drug users
do not seek treatment on time because of
the stigma they face and because they often
cannot afford the cost of treatment.
A group of drug users from Mizoram said:
"(We) go for treatment at the hospital.
But ... (we) sometimes felt that government
hospital(s) discriminate (against) drug
users ... and use bad language ... If (our)
illness is not severe (we) treat (ourselves)
at home, especially when we have abscess
due to drug injecting. But when the abscess
is not cured easily ... (we) go to some
NGO for treatment."
The result is that when finally the treatment
is carried out, it is more costly.
Everybody is also at risk of infection
spreading from drug users. The spread of
HIV, for instance, can take place through
injecting and sexual networks. Through an
infected IDU, HIV can spread to his (or
her) injecting partners.
Sexual networks include people who IDUs
have sex with. These could be regular sex
partners, occasional sexual partners and
female sex workers. A HIV positive IDU could
pass on the virus to any of these sexual
partners. In the case of female sex workers,
HIV can spread to their clients who in turn
can pass it on to their wives and through
them to their unborn children.
What is the solution? Service providers
have been working with IDUs to improve the
quality of their lives in many ways and
to wean them away from drug abuse in this
manner. There are now treatment centres
around the country, providing drug users
with information.
Another novel approach is peer outreach.
Drug users who have recovered go among their
friends to provide current drug users with
information and services. These outreach
workers know where to find the drug users,
they understand their issues and are able
to serve as role models who prove that recovery
is possible.
But the problem is much larger than the
current solutions. Right now, prevention
programmes reach only about 5 percent of
IDUs in India. The immediate need is to
reach this population with a comprehensive
range of services to drug users and IDUs,
in a manner that takes their needs into
consideration.
The good news is that recovery is possible.
Injecting drug users are able to lead healthy,
drug free and productive lives, through
simple cost-effective interventions. So
this year, as we commemorate June 26 as
the International Day against Drug Abuse
and Illicit Trafficking, we can promise
ourselves that there is no place for drugs
in our lives and communities.
(Harsheth Virk works in the United Nations
Office on Drug and Crime (UNODC) in New
Delhi. She can be reached at harsheth.virk@unodc.org)
Indo-Asian News Service
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