HIV/AIDS Data Hub for the Asia-Pacific Region
 
You are here: Lao PDR: Reference Library Injecting Drug Users (IDUs)
Injecting Drug Users (IDUs)
Pakistan Country Advocacy Brief: Injecting Drug Use and HIV. UNODC and UNAIDS (2010)Prioritization of expansion of HIV prevention, treatment and care services fast enough and at a sufficient scale to reach a much larger proportion of people who inject drugs, including in prisons, than is currently being reached

Download this publication

Report on People who Inject Drugs in the South-East Asia Region. WHO (2010)There are more than half a million people who inject drugs (PWID) in the South-East Asia Region (SEAR). The majority of countries in the Region have a significant injecting drug use problem and several countries have reported much higher national HIV prevalence rates among PWID—most notably Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, and some regions of India. In SEAR, HIV prevalence among PWID is frequently above 20- 25% and has remained consistently high. High-risk behaviour by PWID, such as sharing of contaminated needles and syringes, has become a major determining factor in the course of the HIV epidemic.

Download this publication

cover-coming-soon

Injection drug users represent the largest proportion of all HIV reported cases in Viet Nam. This study aimed to explore the perceptions of risk and risk behaviours among HIVpositive injection drug users, and their experiences related to safe injection and safe sex practices.


Download this publication
cover-coming-soon

In 2005, the latest year for which complete data are available, there were an estimated 8.3 million HIV infections in Asia, one-fifth the disease burden worldwide.


Download this publication
cover-coming-soon

Injection drug users bear the burden of HIV in Vietnam and are a focus of national treatment programs. To date, determinants of successful therapy in this population are unknown. Substance use and clinical correlates of viral suppression were studied in 100 HIV-1 infected drug users receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) for at least 6 months in Hanoi, Vietnam.


Download this publication
cover-coming-soon

IDUs who inject socially and IDUs who share needles are likely to engage in highrisk sexual behaviors and may serve as an important bridge group for epidemic HIV transmission in Vietnam. In addition to messages regarding the dangers of sharing needles and other injection equipment, preventive interventions among newly initiated IDUs should also focus on reducing sexual risk.


Download this publication
IBBS 2009, Round IV, Injecting Drug Users (IDUs), Kathmandu, Pokhara, Eastern Terai, Western to Far Western Terai Fact Sheet. USAID, ASHA Project and National Center for AIDS and STD Control (2009)One of the driving forces of Nepal’s HIV epidemic is injecting drug user. Because of unsafe injecting behavior, IDUs have higher risk of HIV infection and prevalence is highest in this sub-group of population in the country. Moreover, IDUs have sexual networking with female sex workers (FSWs).

Download this publication

Drug Use in Afghanistan: 2009 Survey- Executive Summary. UNODC (2009)The human face of Afghanistan’s drug problem is not only seen on the streets of Moscow, London or Paris, it is in the eyes of its own citizens, dependent on a daily dose of opium, heroin, cannabis, painkillers and tranquilizers.

Download this publication

Impact of HIV Prevention Programs on Drug Users in Malaysia. Kamarulzaman, A (2009)

Faced with a rising HIV epidemic among injecting drug users, harm reduction policies and programs were introduced in Malaysia in 2005. The positive impact seen since the introduction of these programs comprise the inclusion of the health aspects of illicit drug use in the country’s drug policies; better access to antiretroviral
therapy for injecting drug users who are HIV infected; reduction in HIV-risk behavior; and greater social benefits, including increased employment.

Source: Kamarulzaman A. (2009). Impact of HIV Prevention Programs on Drug Users in Malaysia. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr.



Download this publication

Page 3 of 10