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- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.politics.clinton,alt.politics.libertarian,talk.politics.misc,alt.society.resistance
- From: borden@netcom.com (David Borden)
- Subject: PRESS RELEASE -- AIDS, Needles & Minorities
- Message-ID: <bordenD931C9.B2D@netcom.com>
- Date: Wed, 24 May 1995 12:28:57 GMT
-
- The following announcement comes to you courtesy of the Foundation for
- Drug Policy Awareness / Drug Reform Coordination Network (DRCNet). For
- more information, e-mail "drcinfo@drcnet.org", or contact: DRCNet, P.O.
- Box 381813, Cambridge, MA 02238-1813; phone: (617) 648-2655; fax: 648-2713.
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- Please copy and distribute.
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 19, 1995
-
- CONTACT: DAWN DAY, Ph.D., (609) 924-4797
- ERIC E. STERLING, (202) 835-9075
-
-
- 44% OF AIDS CASES DRUG-RELATED
-
- INFECTION RATE FOR BLACKS FIVE TIMES RATE FOR WHITES
-
- DIRTY NEEDLES THE PRINCIPAL MEANS OF TRANSMISSION
-
-
- Princeton, N.J. -- The majority of America's new drug-related
- AIDS cases are among African-American and Hispanic males age 13
- and older, according to an analysis of CDC's latest data by Dr.
- Dawn Day, the Director of the Dogwood Center. Drug-related AIDS
- cases now constitute 44% of all new AIDS cases in 1994 where the
- means of transmission of the virus is known. The percentage is
- rapidly growing. The sharing of hypodermic syringes for the
- injection of illegal drugs is the number one cause of this rapid
- increase.
-
- "The wave of AIDS cases among Black and Hispanic Americans can be
- slowed if clean needles are exchanged for ones used by drug
- injectors," said Dr. Day in announcing her data. "Without
- following public health doctrine 101 -- interrupting the spread
- of disease -- this epidemic is on a course that will simply
- overwhelm American medicine, American cities, and people of
- color," she said.
-
- Between 1990 and 1994, the number of new drug-related AIDS cases
- rose 90 percent among African American and Hispanic men age 13
- and older. Dr. Day's research points out the lopsided shape of
- the wave of new AIDS cases. "A key to understanding this
- epidemic is to look at the rates, not the total numbers which
- tend to hide where new AIDS cases are striking. The rate of
- African-American new AIDS cases at 109 per thousand who inject
- drugs is five times greater than the rate of 22 new cases per
- thousand for white drug injectors. The rate for Hispanic drug
- injectors is 94 per thousand. The deaths we're going to see will
- be simply staggering," Dr. Day said.
-
- "Current drug abuse prevention and treatment programs are not
- protecting Blacks and Hispanics from AIDS. These are truly
- crisis numbers. We must follow the advice of organizations such
- as the National Commission on HIV and AIDS, appointed by
- President Bush and make clean needle exchanges available to
- injecting drug users," said Dr. Day.
-
- "In 1994, CDC reports, there were 28,522 new drug-related AIDS
- cases: 15,207 of those cases were among African- American and
- Hispanic males age 13 and older. This is over half of all such
- cases. CDC-commissioned studies of anti-AIDS strategies show
- strongly that providing clean needles to drug users in exchange
- for used needles can cut the spread of AIDS. Each new AIDS case,
- on average, is going to cost society $120,000. Providing health
- care for these people -- whose fatal illness we could have
- prevented -- will cost us $3.4 billion," said Dr. Day.
-
- The most comprehensive study of needle exchange programs,
- initiated during the Bush Administration, was conducted by the
- University of California, San Francisco. Its findings were that
- needle-exchange programs are likely to reduce the spread of AIDS
- and do not appear to increase the use of illegal drugs. The
- study and its findings were further evaluated by the Centers for
- Disease Control (with input from the National Institutes of
- Health and other Federal substance abuse agencies) in December
- 1993. That review endorsed the study's conclusions and
- recommended ending the Federal ban on funding needle exchange
- programs. For more information on the needle exchange study,
- contact Peter Lurie, M.D., M.P.H., at the University of
- California, San Francisco at (415) 597-9138.
-
- Dawn Day is the Director of the Dogwood Center, an independent
- research center in Princeton, N.J. She was a member of the
- Carnegie Corporation-funded team that analyzed changes in the
- lives of African Americans. Her work on household energy
- consumption has been funded by the Ford Foundation. She has
- taught at Brooklyn College and the University of Maryland.
-
- Dr. Day is a member of the National Drug Strategy Network. She
- is the author and co-author of several books on racial
- discrimination: Adoption Agencies and the Adoption of Black
- Children (Lexington Books, 1979); Protest, Politics, and
- Prosperity: Black Americans in White Institutions, 1940-1975
- (Pantheon, 1978 (co-author); The Negro and Discrimination in
- Employment (University of Michigan Institute of Labor and
- Industrial Relations, 1965); The American Energy Consumer
- (Ballinger, 1975, co-author). Currently she is writing a book on
- illicit drugs and racial injustice. She holds both a Ph.D. in
- Sociology and an M.S.W. in social work from the University of
- Michigan. The Dogwood Center, P.O. Box 187, Princeton, N.J.
- 08542, (609) 924-4797, e-mail: dday99@aol.com
-
- # # #
-
- The National Drug Strategy Network is an information sharing
- organization made up of people and organizations that are working
- for effective approaches to the nation's drug problems. It does
- not endorse policies. It is supported by The Criminal Justice
- Policy Foundation, 1899 L Street, NW, Suite 500, Washington, DC
- 20036-3804, Phone: (202) 835-9075, Fax: (202) 833-8561, e-mail:
- ndsn@igc.apc.org.
-
- ==============================================================================
-
- The Drug Reform Coordination network (DRCNet) is a non-profit entity
- dedicated to getting the word out to activists on what they can do to work
- for reform of the nation's drug laws and other related laws and policies.
- The Foundation for Drug Policy Awareness is an educational organization
- that aims to raise public awareness of issues surrounding drug policy.
- DRCNet solicits information from national and state level activist groups
- on how people can help them work for reform, and makes frequent announcements
- by e-mail, fax, mail and phone to its "rapid-response team". DRCNet also
- publishes "The Activist Guide" newsletter on a monthly basis. Full
- membership in the Drug Reform Coordination Network is $25, and includes
- The Activist Guide and membership in the rapid-response team. Newsletter
- alone is $18 for 12 issues, and rapid-response team alone is $10.
- (All material is available by e-mail for free.) For more information on our
- publications and educational outreach projects, contact:
-
- DRCNet, P.O. Box 381813, Cambridge, MA 02238-1813
- (617) 648-2655 / fax: 648-2713 / e-mail: drcinfo@drcnet.org
-
- ============================================================================
- Peace Justice Freedom Compassion Truth
- ============================================================================
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- END THE DRUG WAR
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