Health and Human Rights Concerns of Drug Users in Detention in Guangxi Province, China
Open Access
- 9 December 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLoS Medicine
- Vol. 5 (12) , e234
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.0050234
Abstract
Although confinement in drug detoxification (“detox”) and re-education through labor (RTL) centers is the most common form of treatment for drug dependence in China, little has been published about the experience of drug users in such settings. We conducted an assessment of the impact of detention on drug users' access to HIV prevention and treatment services and consequent threats to fundamental human rights protections. Chinese government HIV and anti-narcotics legislation and policy documents were reviewed, and in-depth and key informant interviews were conducted with 19 injection drug users (IDUs) and 20 government and nongovernmental organization officials in Nanning and Baise, Guangxi Province. Significant contradictions were found in HIV and antinarcotics policies, exemplified by the simultaneous expansion of community-based methadone maintenance therapy and the increasing number of drug users detained in detox and RTL center facilities. IDU study participants reported, on average, having used drugs for 14 y (range 8–23 y) and had been confined to detox four times (range one to eight times) and to RTL centers once (range zero to three times). IDUs expressed an intense fear of being recognized by the police and being detained, regardless of current drug use. Key informants and IDUs reported that routine HIV testing, without consent and without disclosure of the result, was the standard policy of detox and RTL center facilities, and that HIV-infected detainees were not routinely provided medical or drug dependency treatment, including antiretroviral therapy. IDUs received little or no information or means of HIV prevention, but reported numerous risk behaviors for HIV transmission while detained. Legal and policy review, and interviews with recently detained IDUs and key informants in Guangxi Province, China, found evidence of anti-narcotics policies and practices that appear to violate human rights and imperil drug users' health.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Maintenance treatment with buprenorphine and naltrexone for heroin dependence in Malaysia: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trialThe Lancet, 2008
- Rapid scale up of harm reduction in ChinaInternational Journal of Drug Policy, 2007
- Evolution of China's response to HIV/AIDSThe Lancet, 2007
- Do drug users in China who frequently receive detoxification treatment change their risky drug use practices and sexual behavior?Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 2006
- Opiate addiction in China: current situation and treatmentsAddiction, 2006
- Drug Abuse in ChinaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2004
- Demographic characteristics and illegal drug use patterns among attendees of drug cessation programs in China.Substance Use & Misuse, 1999
- Two subtypes of HIV-1 among injection-drug users in southern ChinaThe Lancet, 1998
- Methods of Social ResearchTeaching Sociology, 1988