Pubdate: Sat, 01 Jul 2006
Source: Bradenton Herald (FL)
Section: Health
Copyright: 2006 Bradenton Herald
Contact:  http://www.bradenton.com/mld/bradenton/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/58
Author: Olga Bennett
Note: Olga Bennett, is an HIV/AIDS prevention specialist at Manatee 
Glens, a nonprofit health care provider that delivers services from 
seven Manatee County locations. Manatee Glens, which produces this 
biweekly column, welcomes your questions about mental health and 
substance abuse mat
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)

HIV/AIDS AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE: ARE YOU AT RISK?

State of Mind

By now, people are aware that AIDS is sexually transmitted, but not 
everyone recognizes the connection between HIV and substance use 
disorders. HIV is sneaky. As many as 280,000 Americans are living 
with the virus but don't know it. Of the new infections, the Centers 
for Disease Control estimates that 30-40 percent of them result from 
injection drug use.

Although sharing used needles provides a high-risk for HIV 
transmission, the dangers go far beyond the issue of needles. People 
who abuse alcohol, speed, crack cocaine, poppers or other 
non-injected drugs are more likely than non-substance users to be HIV 
positive. People with a history of non-injection substance abuse are 
also more likely to engage in high-risk sexual activities.

The choice of substances affects the risk of acquiring HIV. For 
example, crack abusers may have different social behaviors than 
alcohol abusers. Among substance abusers who do not use injections, 
HIV infection is not caused by drug use but by unsafe sexual behavior.

It is often believed that having unprotected sex while under the 
influence of drugs or alcohol accounts for a high HIV risk among many 
substance abusers. However, sexual networks and sexual mixing might 
better explain risk. Many people who are in treatment for using drugs 
or alcohol say they tended to select their sexual partners from 
social networks of people like themselves. Their networks might 
include people who have used needles, traded sex for money or drugs, 
been victims of trauma or been incarcerated. All of these populations 
may have higher rates of HIV infection, making transmission more likely.

Post traumatic stress disorder may also account for high sexual 
risk-taking activities among female crack users due to the traumas 
they encounter, whether violent (assault, rape) or nonviolent 
(homelessness, loss of children, a serious accident).

In the state of Florida, 102,287 HIV cases were reported from July 
1997 to April 2006, with 21,553 of those cases attributed to 
injection drug use and male-to-male contact.

If you have been involved in risky behaviors - or even if you think 
your partner may have been - you can gain considerable peace of mind 
by getting yourself tested. It's free and it's anonymous.

For more information on substance abuse, HIV/AIDS and testing, you 
can call Manatee Glens at 782-4169.

Olga Bennett, is an HIV/AIDS prevention specialist at Manatee Glens, 
a nonprofit health care provider that delivers services from seven 
Manatee County locations. Manatee Glens, which produces this biweekly 
column, welcomes your questions about mental health and substance abuse matters.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman