Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
Health

B.C. Study Finds Making Methadone Accessible Slashes HIV Transmission

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Aug, 2015 10:45 AM
    VANCOUVER — Increasing access to methadone treatment through primary-care doctors and pharmacies significantly cuts the spread of HIV, according to research involving Vancouver residents addicted to opioids.
     
    Injection drug users who were not prescribed methadone were almost four times more likely to become HIV-positive, found the study, published in the medical journal The Lancet HIV.
     
    Methadone treatment prevents withdrawal from opioids such as heroin.
     
    The findings provide critical support for British Columbia's methadone maintenance program, which is currently being reviewed by the provincial government, the study's lead author said.
     
    "If you were on medication for your diabetes but you had to travel across your city to get your medication every day from a specialty clinic, and not go to your pharmacy around the corner, you'd be significantly less likely to go," said Dr. Keith Ahamad, with the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS.
     
    "As a result, the consequences related to your diabetes would be much higher. So what we really need to do is increase access to this medication."
     
    The treatment has been controversial, and the government's review involves some pharmacies being shut down because staff were providing financial incentives to patients filling their prescriptions.
     
    Overall, the province has been supportive of the strategy to combat transmission of the AIDS-causing virus, Ahamad said.
     
    Health Canada handed responsibility for methadone programs to the provinces in 1996, when the new study began.
     
    Between 1996 and 2013, researchers followed 1,639 HIV-negative injection drug users. They found the vast majority of 138 people who were infected with HIV over that time were not taking methadone.
     
    Ahamad said people who can easily obtain methadone treatment may be less likely to engage in risky behaviours associated with spreading the virus.
     
    HIV can spread through unprotected sex and sharing injection drug equipment such as needles with someone who has the virus.
     
    "Irrespective of all those other risk factors, methadone is protective," Ahamad said.
     
    HIV infections are rising where methadone treatment is illegal or only prescribed in specialty clinics — in jurisdictions such as in Russia and Indiana state, he said.
     
    British Columbia's strategy can be used as a model within Canada, where treatment barriers still remain in some places, Ahamad said. 
     
    Patients in rural areas are harder to serve, Ahamad said, adding not all primary-care doctors are fully trained to provide the intervention.
     
    In B.C., physicians can take a one-day course to write methadone prescriptions.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Simple blood test can now detect cancer

    Simple blood test can now detect cancer
    In a first, British researchers have devised a simple blood test that can be used to diagnose whether people have cancer or not...

    Simple blood test can now detect cancer

    Effective oral contraceptives for obese women soon

    Effective oral contraceptives for obese women soon
    Obese women who use oral contraceptives to prevent pregnancy can now heave a sigh of relief as researchers have identified ways to make birth control pills more effective....

    Effective oral contraceptives for obese women soon

    Green spaces impact birth weight positively

    Green spaces impact birth weight positively
    Where expecting mothers live can also have a bearing on the birth weight of their babies as researchers have found that mothers who live near green spaces deliver...

    Green spaces impact birth weight positively

    Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide

    Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide
    Two beneficial variants of a gene controlling red blood cells development have spread from Africa into nearly all human populations across the globe, a study reveals....

    Useful blood gene variants spread in humans worldwide

    New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered

    New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered
    In what could lead to new treatment for Parkinson's disease, scientists have identified 24 genetic risk factors involved in the disease, including six that had not...

    New genetic risk factors for Parkinson's discovered

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia
    A research has found that drugs widely used to treat lung diseases like asthma or pneumonia work better with the body clock....

    Shift work can worsen asthma, pneumonia