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Kiev, Ukraine, February 14, 2008 — In advance of a regional AIDS
conference in Moscow, nearly 90 health and human rights groups from 27
countries today petitioned a top health official to allow drug treatment patients to enter Russia with their medications.
Methadone and buprenorphine are prescribed worldwide to treat addiction
to opiates such as heroin, and have been shown to be effective tools in
HIV prevention and treatment efforts. Yet Russia continues to ban the use of the medications for drug addiction treatment.
Thousands of people throughout Eastern Europe and Central Asia use
methadone and buprenorphine to overcome addiction and improve their
lives,” said Vladimir Zhovtyak of the East European & Central Asian
Union of People Living With HIV Organizations (ECUO). “In order to
create truly effective AIDS responses, we need the full participation
of marginalized populations including drug user communities.”
The petition was organized by ECUO along with the All-Ukrainian Network
of People Living With HIV/AIDS, the Eurasian Harm Reduction Network,
the European Opiate Addiction Treatment Association, the Russian AIDS
activist group FrontAIDS, the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union, the
International Network of People Who Use Drugs, the South Eastern
European-Adriatic Addiction Treatment Network, and the International
Harm Reduction Development Program of the Open Society Institute.
The groups are calling on Russia to make exceptions to the ban and
accommodate conference participants who are undergoing methadone or
buprenorphine treatment in their home countries. The petition was
delivered today to Russia’s Chief Sanitary Doctor, Gennady Onischenko,
and conference organizers, including the International AIDS Society and
officials with the United Nations and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
The Eastern European and Central Asian AIDS Conference (EECAAC) will
be held in Moscow May 3-5. The meeting is being promoted as a leading
forum for health experts and activists addressing the HIV pandemic.
However, in a region where injection drug use accounts for more than 70
percent of cumulative HIV cases, many AIDS activists are former drug
users who are undergoing methadone or buprenorphine treatment. These
activists will be forced to choose between their personal health and
participation in an important public health forum, say the groups.
“The Russian ban on methadone and buprenorphine, and the failure of
global health leaders to address this issue directly, undermines the
goals of the conference and the needs of people at risk for or living
with HIV,” said Raminta Stuikyte of the Eurasian Harm Reduction Network.
Methadone and buprenorphine, which are on the World Health
Organization’s Model List of Essential Medicines, are prescribed in
many countries throughout the region, including Azerbaijan, Belarus,
Estonia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Ukraine, and
Uzbekistan, among others.
The letter with full list of sign-on groups is online.
Contact:
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, All-Ukrainian Network of PLWHA, +38-067-547-5780,
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, East European & Central Asian Union of PLWH, +38-044-4677665,
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, Eurasian Harm Reduction Network, +370-69-966-677,
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, Open Society Institute, +1-212-548-0309,
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