Evidence suggests that people who inject drugs often begin
their drug use and injecting practices in adolescence, yet there are limited
data available on the HIV epidemic and the responses for this population. The
comprehensive package of interventions for the prevention, treatment and care
of HIV infection among people who inject drugs first laid out in 2009 (revised
in 2012) by World Health Organization, United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime
and Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, does not consider the unique
needs of adolescent and young people. In order to better understand the values
and preferences of young people who inject drugs in accessing harm reduction
services and support, we undertook a series of community consultations with
young people with experience of injecting drugs during adolescence.
Nineteen community consultations were organized
with a total of 132 participants. All participants had experienced injecting
drugs before the age of 18. They had the following age distribution: 18–20
(37%), 21–25 (48%) and 26–30 (15%). Of the participants, 73.5% were male while
25.7% were female, with one transgender participant. Barriers to accessing the
comprehensive package included: lack of information and knowledge of services,
age restrictions on services, belief that services were not needed, fear of law
enforcement, fear of stigma, lack of concern, high cost, lack of outreach, lack
of knowledge of HCV/TB and lack of youth friendly services.
The consultations provide a rare insight into the
lived experiences of adolescents who inject drugs and highlight the dissonance
between their reality and current policy and programmatic approaches. Findings
suggest that harm reduction and HIV policies and programmes should adapt the
comprehensive package to reach young people and explore linkages to other
sectors such as education and employment to ensure they are fully supported and
protected. Continued participation of the community of young people who inject
drugs can help ensure policy and programmes respond to the social exclusion and
denial of rights and prevent HIV infection among adolescents who inject drugs.
By: Krug A1, Hildebrand M2, Sun N2.
- 1Youth RISE, London, UK; anita@youthrise.org.
- 2UNAIDS, Geneva, Switzerland.
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