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Saturday, 30 July 2011 15:15

HIV Sero Prevalence Study among Inmates of Welikada Prison, National STD/AIDS Control Programme, Sri Lanka (2011)

HIV Syphilis Sero Survey in Walikada Prison 2010 2011

Prisoners tend to be among the most marginalized and discriminated against populations in society due to the concentration of people such as injecting drug users (IDUs) and sex workers, among whom HIV prevalence is much higher than in the general population. Incarceration may be the only point of contact with the healthcare system for many in this transient and often inaccessible population. Given the high prevalence of HIV and the public health impact of undiagnosed infection on both the individuals and the communities they return to, HIV testing within prisons and jails is critically important. With the risk of transmission highest among the untreated and undiagnosed when viral loads are high, as well as the demonstrated decrease in risk behaviours after diagnosis, testing for HIV has both individual and public health benefits. HIV prevalence in prisons is often significantly higher than in the general population. While most prisoners living with HIV contract their infection outside the institutions before imprisonment, the risk of being infected in prison through sharing of contaminated injecting equipment and unprotected sex is great, and contributes to
further transmission of the virus.


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