As the number of HIV-positive people in
Guangdong nearly doubled last year, methadone treatment for
drug addicts in the province is being offered to fight the spread
of HIV/AIDS.
In Guangdong, the number of HIV-positive people rose to 13,032
last year from 7,477 in 2004, ranking fifth among those for all
Chinese provinces and regions, following Yunnan and Henan provinces
and the autonomous regions of Guangxi Zhuang and Xinjiang
Uygur.
By the end of 2005, 792 AIDS cases had been reported and 355
people had died from the disease in Guangdong, according to an
annual report released by the Guangdong Health Department last
week.
"Since a lot of HIV carriers who contracted the virus before
1998 have turned into AIDS patients now, the situation of the
disease will be much more serious in the future," said Huang Fei, a
deputy director of the department, on Friday.
More than 80 percent of the HIV carriers are drug addicts, Huang
said.
Guangdong started methadone treatment for drug addicts at the
end of 2005, an important move by the government to prevent and
control the spread of the virus, he said.
Two hospitals, Dagou County Central Hospital and Taihe County
Central Hospital, started to run their methadone programme on World
AIDS Day (December 1) last year. They are located in the cities of
Yangjiang and Taishan respectively, which have a larger number of
drug addicts.
In Yangjiang of western Guangdong, dozens of drug addicts have
been taking the treatment daily at the Dagou County Central
Hospital under the doctor's supervision.
The hospital plans to treat about 200 drug addicts in total.
Taking methadone a synthesized narcotic helps reduce addicts'
craving for drugs and deters them from using hypodermic needles
that can spread HIV/AIDS and other blood-transmitted diseases.
Moreover, those who take methadone are able to work and return
to normal life instead of looking sleepy all day after taking
heroin.
To ensure they actually drink methadone, doctors require that
those in the programme open their mouths and say "thank you" after
taking it. Doctors do regular urine tests among methadone takers,
preventing them from taking heroin or other drugs during the
treatment.
"The methadone programme runs quite well," said Tan Wenkang, a
deputy director of the hospital.
He believed more addicts would take the treatment in the
future.
Tan said each addict gets a dose of methadone at 10 yuan
(US$1.2).
As methadone is a substitute for drugs, some patients have to
take it all their lives, but some can get rid of the drug addiction
after they take it for several years, according to Tan.
"Our goal is to set up 10 more methadone treatment clinics in
the province this year, making about 2,000 drug addicts benefit,"
Huang said.
China started the methadone treatment programme in 2001 to
combat the increasing number of drug addicts.
So far, methadone treatment is available in 127 clinics all over
the country. The number may increase by 1,000 in the following five
years, according to Huang.
The clinics in Yangjiang and Taishan are among the methadone
treatment clinics that are accredited by the central
government.
(China Daily February 20, 2006)