Jabs in the dark: injecting equipment found in prisons, and the risks of viral transmission
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Australian Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 18 (1) , 113-116
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1753-6405.1994.tb00207.x
Abstract
Injecting drug users in prisons may reuse and share contaminated injecting equipment, increasing their risk of infection with blood-borne viruses. We examined 58 syringes found in three metropolitan Adelaide prisons during a one-year period: 95 per cent were one millilitre volume; blood was visible in 24 per cent; 58 per cent indicated repeated use; 33 per cent were wrapped in plastic; and 26 per cent had detachable needles, allowing more blood to be trapped in the dead space between the syringe barrel and needle than with the fixed-needle variety. The nature and condition of some of these syringes suggested they might transmit contaminated blood. The ineffectiveness of present approaches to keeping injecting equipment out of prisons demands a more enlightened approach to harm minimisation. With doubts cast on the efficacy of bleach, education should be supported by practical means to reduce transmission of viruses. Provision of sterile injecting equipment is a possible option.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Injecting drug users and the Human Immunodeficiency Virus: what do we know?Drug and Alcohol Review, 1992
- Residual blood in syringes: size and type of syringe are importantAIDS, 1991
- Risk factors and HIV seropositivity among injecting drug users in BangkokAIDS, 1991
- Bloody needlesAIDS, 1991
- HIV prevalence and risk behaviours for HIV transmission in South Australian prisonsAIDS, 1991
- Sexual transmission of hepatitis C virus and its relation with hepatitis B virus and HIV.BMJ, 1990
- Epidemiology and hepatitis C virus in VictoriaThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1990
- Drug Injecting and Syringe Sharing in Custody and in the Community: An Exploratory Survey of HIV Risk BehaviourThe Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 1990
- HIV-1 Infection Among Intravenous Drug Users in Manhattan, New York City, From 1977 Through 1987Published by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1989
- Danger of dead space in U100 insulin syringes.BMJ, 1984