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China expands trials of new drug-relief therapy to curb spread of AIDS
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2005-05-16
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KUNMING, May 16 (Xinhuanet) -- South
China's Guangdong Province, which borders Hong Kong, and
Beijing have announced their plan to join five other
provincial areas to offer a narcotics substitute to drug
addicts almost free of charge to fight drug abuse and the
spread of AIDS.
Drug
addicts in those areas will be offered adanon, an opium-type
medicine, as a narcotics substitute to alleviate their
addictions under the State-sanctioned program, which critics
say lacks a legal basis.
According to the program, drug addicts will take
fixed amounts of adanon orally under the surveillance of
medical workers at designated adanon therapy centers.
The move is part of the
efforts China has taken to deal with the challenges of
controlling drug abuse.
During her speech to the National AIDS Prevention
Committee last month, Chinese Vice-Premier Wu Yi described
the move as an effective intervention in preventing the
spread of AIDS.
The
vice-premier said China must be firm in carrying out the
experiments, and continue to offer clean syringes in
exchange for used ones and to promote condom use.
In February 2003, the
Ministry of Health, Ministry of Public Security and the
State Food and Drug Administration made public a provision
on community-based use of narcotics substitute among heroine
addicts.
Since then,
Yunnan Province, which borders Myanmar and China's
southwestern Sichuan and Guizhou provinces, eastern Zhejiang
Province, and southern Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region,
have launched the experiments.
Medical experts said about 80 heroine addicts are
involved in such an experiment in the Disease Prevention and
Control Center inGejiu City in Yunnan, the first of its kind
in the province. The patients and their family members said
the treatment has proved tobe effective.
Min Xiangdong, director of the center,
said the experiment began less than a month ago after the
center was designated by thecentral government for the
experiment and six months of preparation.
The rare interview was made possible
with the approval of the Yunnan Provincial AIDS Prevention
and Control Taskforce, and Xinhua was allowed to take
pictures of drug addicts taking fixed amounts of adanon
orally under the surveillance of two medical doctors.
The drug addicts have to
pay 5 yuan (60 US cents) a day for thedrug during the
experiment, half the price set by the provincial and central
governments. The charge is a token payment as the drugis as
expensive as heroine on the black market.
At the center, a 34 year-old drug
addict only identified as Mr.Zhao told Xinhua said he had a
history of using banned drugs for about a decade before
joining the treatment.
He said he came to feel like a normal person after
experiment in the past two weeks, and takes about 75 ml of
the drug substitute every afternoon, while working as a
volunteer at the center.
Zhao, who looks good, said the substitute makes
him feel good every day as he never feels the urge for
heroine.
"The
service is good and I'm confident about my future,"
said Zhao with a smile.
He used his experience to convince his former
fellow heroine users to participate in the treatment.
Accompanied by her
81-year-old mother, a thin woman who gave her surname as
Liu, came to the center for the first time late last month.
Zhang Lichong, a 50 year-old doctor, prescribed 50 ml of the
substitute for her.
Liu's mother said they applied to local police for
the service after they became aware of the service through
community-based publicity.
Zhang said they set the dose after careful medical
observation of Liu for undesirable reactions from taking the
prescribed dose in the first three consecutive days.
After taking the
greenish medicine orally, Liu said it tasted somewhat
bitter. She was signaled to go to the waiting room, whereshe
chatted with her mother or picked up some leaflets on the
experiment, while doctors observed her for about 30 minutes
for signs of reaction.
Zhang told Liu to go home half an hour later as
she showed no sign of improper reaction.
The city diagnosed its first group of
AIDS patients or HIV carriers in 1996, and all of them were
drug addicts, who still account for 70 percent of AIDS
patients and HIV carriers, Min Xiangdong said.
"From a medical
perspective, we have been arguing that the country should
face reality and offer a narcotics substitute for drug users
to prevent them from sharing a syringe and contracting
AIDS," said the director.
Regarding the concerns over the legal status and
moral issues involved in the treatment, Min said "We
are a medical institution,not a drug rehabilitation
department. So long it proves effective medically in curbing
the spread of AIDS, we think it's worth trying."
Official figures showed
that 840,000 Chinese have been infectedof HIV and 80,000 of
them are AIDS patients, making China Asia's second and the
world's 14th largest HIV/AIDS population. The majority of
HIV carriers and AIDS patients in China are young people and
live in rural areas.
China unveiled earlier this year a package of
measures to fightAIDS, including the creation of a national
taskforce on AIDS headed by Vice-Premier Wu Yi, increased
funding support and improved medical services for AIDS
patients and HIV carriers, plans to improve public awareness
on prevention and control of thedisease. Enditem
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