Guest guest Posted January 20, 2008 Report Share Posted January 20, 2008 Chandigarh, January 19 Punjab and Haryana are going the Nagaland, Manipur way. At least that’s what the first-ever size estimation of injecting drug use (IDU) population in the two northern states and their capital Chandigarh has revealed. The study, conducted by Society for Promotion of Youth and Masses (SPYM) in collaboration with UNAIDS and AIIMS had further shown that most of the injecting drug users in Punjab and Haryana were using pharmaceutical preparations often mixed with sedatives. In an exclusive interview to The Tribune on the eve of all-India release of the study on January 21, Rajesh Kumar of SPYM said the situation in northern states was alarming. “We have been saying for long that the problem in Punjab and Haryana is deep and serious. But we had nothing to support our claims. This study, for the first time, provides scientific proof of the problem and lists vulnerable groups and services available to them,” Kumar says. Based on respondent driven sampling (RDS), a new methodology, the study relies on a vast sample - around 300 IDUs per district at the chosen sites in Punjab, Haryana and Chandigarh. National AIDS Control Organization (NACO) had long been saying that in India, IDUs account for 2.2 percent of HIV transmissions. But the SPYM study suggests that the numbers affected by injecting drug use may be higher. “The idea behind the study was to fill the existing gaps in information available on IDUs in northern states. The culture of denial about the problem needs to be challenged. The problem in north is that the cross-border supply of illegal drugs was banned, but the demand for drugs had not been controlled. Resultantly, addicts had taken to “legal” drugs easily available on chemist shops. A greater danger was being posed by a new category of drugs called stimulants,” Kumar said. Stimulants are more dangerous than depressants (pharmaceutical preparations) as their withdrawal is very serious. “The incidence of dependence on stimulants is rising in India. This category of drugs is very dangerous because we yet don’t know much about them. Rehabilitation of stimulant dependents is also a challenge as strategies are not yet known,” Kumar said. As for the IDU study in Punjab and Haryana, SPYM offered incentives to those who came for interviews. “That was part of RDS. Peers, who induced addicts to come forward for interviews were given incentives in the form of T-shirts etc. Addicts, who turned up then became peers themselves and got “peer” incentives. They in turn urged other addicts to get sampled. The chain kept growing,” Kumar said, adding that SPYM used the services of Dr B.M. Tripathi and Dr Atul Ambekar from AIIMS to study health and behaviour related indicators pertaining to addicts. To be released at a state-level function in Panjab University on January 21, the study is very significant in terms of its scope. It profiles IDUs in Punjab, Haryana, and Chandigarh, lists the type of drugs they are using and why, maps their needle-sharing practices and HIV risk, studies their health-seeking behaviour besides pointing out deficiencies in rehabilitation services available to them. 30 NGOs partnered with SPYM in this project. http://www.tribuneindia.com/2008/20080120/cth1.htm#4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.