Bloodborne HIV: Don't Get Stuck!

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Tag Archives: denialism

Kenya: Needle Exchange Programs Could Save Lives


Despite the success of needle exchange and other harm reduction programs around the world, there people and institutions who still reject them. Even though injection drug use is said to contribute a relatively small proportion of HIV infections in Kenya, apparently some community and religious groups don’t always wish to support them. Perhaps they do not understand harm reduction?

Canada has been particularly open to needle exchange and other programs, and the view that “Drug users shouldn’t be given clean needles…it only encourages them” is a minority view now, thankfully. If needle exchange reduces transmission of HIV and hepatitis, it must be encouraged. While it may not cut injection drug use directly, it provides a means of reaching out to users in a meaningful way.

Persecuting durg users and suspected drug users, searching and questioning them, using possession of syringes as a reason for arresting them and confiscating their injecting equipment, do not ultimately result in a reduction in injecting drug use. Worse still, these actions result in users facing potentially more dangerous conditions, as well as increasing syringes and needle reuse.

Community and religious groups may be influenced by a hangover from the Bush era. Bush had a sort of ‘victorian’ influence; if he believed something, no matter how stupid, his supporters (sort of hard to believe he had them, but he must have) would believe the same thing. This is especially true of his supporters who were in receipt of US funding for their activities.

The contribution of prison populations to the HIV epidemic in Kenya is also said to be high. Even Canada, the US and Australia don’t have a needle exchange program in prisons, but it would be wise for Kenya to establish where infections are coming from among prisoners.

Aside from the copious innuendo about what men do in prisons, male to male sex is likely to be an issue in a country where it can land you in prison. Prisoners must face other risks, too. Injection drug use is one possibility, but also perhaps tattoos, body percing, blood oaths, traditional practices occur in prisons? Even sharing razors and other sharp objects carries some risk.

Kenya’s Modes of Transmission Survey is not a reliable means of estimating the combined contribution of several groups, such as injection drug users and prison populations. People who fall into these groups may face a high risk of being infected, yet few intervention programs are currently aimed at them.

Needle exchange programs would be a good start and may help to launch other programs, such as opioid replacement therapy, in the long run. But other programs addressing prisoners, men who have sex with men, sex workers and others could address between 20 and 30% of HIV transmission, which is a very substantial figure.

Too many African countries have been swayed by Western prudishness about sexual behavior in their approach to HIV. They have adopted some of the homophobia, xenophobia and other prejudices on which various wars on ‘terror’, ‘drugs’ and the like have been based. This has not led to rapid reductions in HIV transmission; so it’s time for a change.

The Only Certainty About Unsafe Healthcare and HIV is Ignorance About It


An article by Ndebele, Ruzario and Gutsire-Zinyama, who work for the Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe, claims to dismiss the ‘wait and wipe’ finding, which came from circumcision studies carried out in Africa. This refers to the finding that men who waited at least 10 minutes after coitus and used a dry cloth to wipe their genitals were far less likely to be infected with HIV than both circumcised and uncircumcised men who did not follow this procedure.

What is most extraordinary about this finding is that it has been feebly denied by some, but ignored by far more; in contrast, the findings about a rather weak association between circumcision and HIV transmission was used to push an extremely aggressive, well funded and loudly publicized program to circumcise as many African males, both teenagers and children, as possible.

One should no longer be surprised when researchers embrace the results they expected, while at the same time distancing themselves from those they don’t expect, and certainly don’t want. The ‘wait and wipe’ finding was presented at a conference some time back and was covered by US media. But it never received the attention, or subsequent funding, that mass male circumcision programs received.

So, seven years after those hyped mass male circumcision programs started, and a claimed several million men and boys circumcised under the programs, no further research appears to have been done into this interesting finding. Ndebele et al, who don’t seem aware that HIV prevalence in Zimbabwe is higher among circumcised men, rebuke several commentators, including myself, for suggesting that ‘wait and wipe’ could become an alternative strategy to circumcision.

What I said was that appropriate penile hygiene is a lot simpler, cheaper, safer and less invasive than mass male circumcision. The circumcision enthusiasts have encouraged people to associate circumcision with hygiene, but they have never shown that HIV transmission has anything to do with penile (or vaginal) hygiene. It simply suits their purposes that people seem ready to believe in such a connection.

So how can Ndebele et al question the findings about penile hygiene without also questioning those about mass male circumcision? And how can they not call for further research to be carried out? They accuse myself and other commentators of engaging in ‘pure speculation’, which we do engage in. But we are not the ones who collected the original data, some of which we now wish to selectively dismiss, and the rest of which we wish to use to aggressively promote circumcision programs.

So they proceed to engage in pure speculation of their own, and they seem to believe they are ‘dismissing’ arguments about the possible role of unsafe healthcare with a rhetorical question: they ask “With all the campaigns on safe needles that have been going on, where on earth can one still find health professionals using unsafe needles?” The answer is that syringe reuse is likely to occur in every high HIV prevalence African country.

Merely running a campaign about unsafe healthcare and syringe reuse does not reveal the extent of HIV transmission through these routes. Nor does running a campaign ensure that unsafe healthcare simply ceases to be an issue after a few years. No number of strategies, position papers, frameworks, roadmaps, multi-page reports, toolboxes or other pen-pushing exercises so beloved by the HIV industry will tell us the extent of non-sexual transmission of HIV through unsafe healthcare.

Nor will ‘putting unsafe healthcare on the agenda’ (no matter for how long) ensure that any meaningful changes will come about. Most people know little about non-sexually transmitted HIV and are constantly told that 80% of transmission or higher in Africa is a result of unsafe sex. Researchers rarely even mention HIV transmitted through unsafe healthcare, except to dismiss it, without evidence.

The authors argue that the results they wish to embrace are correct and that the results they wish to deny are merely a “coincidental finding”, and conclude that “there is no need to conduct further research” into the ‘wait and wipe’ finding.

This just about sums up the HIV industry’s approach to mass male circumcision. This has been a process of scrabbling about for data, any data which appears to support the program, and denying or ignoring any data which shows the program to be a hoax; all cobbled together by greedy (and probably somewhat pathological) ‘experts’, who will do anything to promote circumcision, ably supported by an institutionally racist HIV industry.

HIV Risks For Women Who Have Sex With Women


Given the flaws in UNAIDS’ Modes of Transmission model, the bulk of HIV transmissions in African countries are unexplained. They are not almost all, as UNAIDS claims, a result of heterosexual sex. Many must result from other modes of transmission, but UNAIDS has failed to take the necessary steps to investigate non-sexual transmission, through unsafe healthcare, cosmetic or traditional practices.

Another possible set of unexplained transmissions comes from research into women who have sex with women (WSW). A paper by Sandfort et al finds that “based on the available data [they] could not identify a transmission route for 13 of the infected women”, about a third of all infected women. The authors do admit that they “cannot rule out that these women were infected at birth or through medical procedures”, but they didn’t collect data that would allow them to rule out infection through medical procedures, for some reason.

A paper by Matebeni et al note that there are “some cultural practices in Southern Africa [which] render women’s bodies vulnerable and thus contribute to the spread HIV and AIDS” but they don’t say which ones, perhaps they are referring to female genital mutilation. This paper also mentions the possibility of expusure to medical transmissions, but they don’t make it clear what kind they are referring to.

Both papers give credence to the possibility that some of the women were infected with HIV through sex with their female partners. But if they haven’t tested the female sexual partners of the women they found to be HIV positive, we are as much in the dark about the risks of transmission through sex between women, particularly women who have sex exclusively with other women.

Both papers conclude that further research is needed and the authors are to be applauded for starting to address this highly sensitive subject. But it is to be hoped that they will consider non-sexual transmission if they do further research. Contact tracing would need to include, not just sexual contacts, but also contacts where the HIV positive person could have come into contact with someone else’s blood, such as various healthcare, cosmetic or traditional procedures.

UNAIDS and Uganda: Prejudice Begets Prejudice


Using UNAIDS’ inherently flawed Modes of Transmission spreadsheet, the Zambian government have decided that men who have sex with men (along with their assumed female partners) give rise to 1.4% of new HIV cases every year. Not a high percentage. But even African countries which use alternative means of estimating also come up with a relatively low figure.

Despite the fact that the contribution is known to be low, some don’t seem to be able to resist the temptation to whip out the homophobia card at every opportunity. The current anti-gay frenzy in Uganda may have been stirred up by various conservative evangelical Christian groups, but it has become a useful political tool; whenever anyone mentions anything political, someone starts spewing out homophobic bilge. What are purely homophobic attacks are then dressed up as part of an anti-HIV strategy.

Spurious figures from UNAIDS for the proportion of HIV transmission said to be a result of some kind of illicit sexual behavior are used to support an assumption that anyone with HIV has engaged in illicit sex. Therefore, even though the contribution of men who have sex with men is not high, it’s an easy step to just point the finger at any group you hate, or whose behavior you consider to be wrong (or ‘sinful’), and blame them.

But the Ugandan government has tried to claim that its homophobic act (the Anti-Homosexuality act of 2014) does not put healthcare employees in the position where they must choose between running the risk of accusations of ‘promoting the act of homosexuality’ or ‘abetting homosexuality’ and the like, which carry a heavy sentence, or breaching their ethical and professional codes of conduct (and international human rights agreements). The government’s “Ministerial Directive on Access to Health Services without Discrimination” does not explain how healthcare workers should resolve this dilemma.

The trumped up nonsense about gay people ‘recruiting’ youth is reminiscent of other rabid conservative fundamentalist claptrap that has fed the media for decades. But the ‘blame the victim’ mentality and the finger pointing at assumed sexual behavior of African people in the field of HIV comes directly from UNAIDS and the HIV industry. There’s a gem of wisdom from their former Chief Scientist on this blog post, but it’s pure redneck, so prepare to be offended.

The best way to defuse this obsession with linking HIV to things various atavistic parties consider evil, such as male to male sex, or sex between African people (and between African Americans), is to trace the non-sexual as well as the sexual contacts of people testing positive. It will then become clear that the virus can also be transmitted through unsafe healthcare, cosmetic and traditional practices, and not just through unsafe sexual behavior.

Denial Reigns Supreme in the HIV Industry


Just a couple of days ago I mentioned the industry myth that everyone is at risk of being infected with HIV, but I didn’t expect to come across this piece of 1980s PR again so soon. Nor did I expect to find it in the New Republic.

Most disturbingly, the article is about “interactive maps depicting where AIDS infections were most prevalent [in the US]”. These maps corroborate what statistics have shown for a long time, that the people most likely to be infected live in certain identifiable places, that the epidemic is often associated with poverty, and that black people are far more likely to be infected than white people.

I find this disturbing because, having depicted so clearly that people living in certain parts of the country where the population is either poor, black or both are far more likely to be infected, the lead researcher is quoted as saying that “the fundamental, scientific truth of HIV hasn’t changed. Anybody can still get it.”

This is not a ‘scientific truth’, nor any other kind of truth. It was realized a long time ago that many powerful people would not support a program to address a disease that was said to be prevalent mainly among men who have sex with men and injection drug users. So campaigns were based on spurious ‘expert opinions’, and data was massaged to suggest that everyone was at risk.

Fair enough, in the US it may have seemed at the time that men who have sex with men and injection drug users were already discriminated against, and this prejudice would need to be addressed before much progress could be made against the recently discovered virus. The campaigns were supposed to take the heat off these (at that time) marginalized groups.

It probably worked in the case of men who have sex with men, although it wasn’t so successful for those who inject drugs. But one of the biggest fallouts from the campaign was the effect it had on what became the received view of HIV in African countries, some of which still had very low prevalence at the time, but would eventually suffer the worst epidemics in the world.

The HIV industry was built around the promulgation of the view that if HIV prevalence was highest among people who only engaged in heterosexual sex, as it was found to be in high prevalence African countries, they must have engaged in massive amounts of sex, and it must be very unsafe sex.

But even after the industry abandoned its claim about everyone being at risk, they didn’t abandon the myth that most HIV transmission in African countries is a result of unsafe heterosexual sex. As a result, three decades of unsafe healthcare has almost entirely escaped the attention of the industry, along with the billions thrown at the virus.

Some in the industry still pontificate about more women than men being infected in African countries, the fact that babies are still being infected despite scaling up of antiretroviral drugs, high death rates despite the amount of money spent on treatment, etc, but none of them have asked about non sexual risks, through unsafe healthcare, cosmetic and traditional practices.

It was OK to talk about non-sexual transmission in the early days, and it’s still OK to talk about it when children are infected (and, on rare occasions, white, middle-class heterosexuals in Western countries, presumably). So why is it difficult to accept that adults in African countries, even adults who are sexually active, can also face non sexual risks?

Groups of people said to be at higher risk of infection in African countries were identified left, right and center, but none of them were identified for their non sexual risks, only for their assumed sexual risks. Almost all women (of course), ‘mobile’ people (not just transport workers, but also migrant workers, soldiers and many others), those engaged in certain occupations, such as fishing and mining, etc.

But women who are sexually active tend to visit health facilities, sex workers visit sexually transmitted infection clinics, so do soldiers and transport workers (and others), big employers such as mines often provide some kind of rudimentary health services, as do some government departments; healthcare is not as ubiquitous as sex, but it is pretty widespread in certain places.

Those who were not at risk, in contrast, often seemed to be poorer people, uneducated people, rural dwelling people, people who didn’t live very close to infrastructure or health services, unemployed people and others, whose low risk is explained away by rubbish about smaller sexual networks and the like.

The myth about everyone being at risk of HIV is dangerous because it is so closely related to the myth that HIV is almost always transmitted sexually in African countries. If people don’t know the non sexual risks, they will not know that they need to avoid them, or how to avoid them; if risky practices in health, cosmetic and other facilities are not addressed, they will continue to occur.