2005
DOI: 10.1186/1477-7517-2-16
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A situational picture of HIV/AIDS and injection drug use in Vinnitsya, Ukraine

Abstract: BackgroundNew and explosive HIV epidemics are being witnessed in certain countries of Eastern Europe, including Ukraine, as well as a rapid and dramatic increase in the supply, use, and negative public health consequences of illicit drugs. A majority of registered HIV cases in Ukraine occur among injection drug users (IDUs), large numbers of whom report HIV risk behaviors such as needle sharing. The purpose of this study was to apply the World Health Organization's Rapid Assessment and Response on Injection Dr… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Harsh punitive drug policies associated with high rates of incarceration and the limited availability of evidence-based OST, ART, and harm reduction services within prisons are likely contributing to a rapidly growing HIV epidemic in Ukraine specifically and in Eastern Europe and Central Asia generally (Atun & Olynik, 2008; Barcal et al, 2005; J. Cohen, 2010; UNAIDS, 2010; Vagenas et al, 2013; Wolfe, Carrieri, & Shepard, 2010).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Harsh punitive drug policies associated with high rates of incarceration and the limited availability of evidence-based OST, ART, and harm reduction services within prisons are likely contributing to a rapidly growing HIV epidemic in Ukraine specifically and in Eastern Europe and Central Asia generally (Atun & Olynik, 2008; Barcal et al, 2005; J. Cohen, 2010; UNAIDS, 2010; Vagenas et al, 2013; Wolfe, Carrieri, & Shepard, 2010).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As opposed to many regions where reductions in HIV occurred, the epidemic in this region has been largely driven by PWID. Among this group, HIV prevention has been undermined by a harsh, punitive political and social climate that features frequent and long-term imprisonment, limited harm-reduction services, extreme stigmatization, and widespread police abuse toward PWID (Atun and Olynik, 2008; Barcal et al, 2005; Cohen, 2010; UNAIDS, 2010; Wolfe et al, 2010; Wolfe and Cohen, 2010). While our data are derived from a subset of recently imprisoned HIV-infected individuals in Ukraine, there is little reason to think the situation is much different for other HIV-infected individuals, particularly PWID.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…HIV transmission also occurred through sexual contact, as well as HCV transmission, but at a very low risk. The forces of infection were calculated according to baseline risks of transmission per sexual act for HIV [ 17 , 18 ] and HCV [ 19 ], the mean number of sexual intercourse acts per person, the condom use rate and its efficacy [ 12 , 20 ], and the number of injecting drug partners, considering the affinity rate among PWID [ 9 , 21 ]. We also considered the relative risk reduction (RRR) of sexual transmission for HIV-infected patients on ART [ 9 , 12 ] and/or HCV-infected patients on DAA.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%