Pubdate: Wed, 01 Dec 2010 Source: Record, The (Kitchener, CN ON) Copyright: 2010 The Record Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/942MrkRX Website: http://news.therecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/225 Author: Johanna Weidner LOCAL PROGRAMS AIMED AT PREVENTING SPREAD OF HIV WATERLOO REGION - Most days Dr. Chris Steingart sees at least one new patient with HIV or hepatitis in his Waterloo office. The growing complacency around HIV/AIDS, even among those at higher- risk for contracting the virus, worries the infectious disease specialist. "It makes me realize we're not doing a good enough job in educating people about it," Steingart said. Steingart is the clinical director of the Sanguen Health Centre, which opened in January to offer local care to patients with hepatitis C who before had to travel out of town. It's also a satellite office of the Guelph-based Masai Centre caring for HIV patients. "Unfortunately, we still see people being infected with the virus," Steingart said. Wednesday is World AIDS Day. Worldwide, 33.3 million people are living with HIV, including 2.5 million children under 15, according to the United Nation's HIV/AIDS program called UNAIDS. About 2.6 million were newly infected last year and 1.8 million died. "I think people need to be aware AIDS is still a problem," Steingart said. And not just in African nations ravaged by the disease, but also at home. Steingart's patient roster is steadily growing at the centre, which has an innovative approach of combining services for both HIV and hepatitis C. Commonly people are infected with both viruses, although hepatitis C infection is about five times as prevalent as HIV. Waterloo Region has about 400 HIV patients, Steingart said, and upwards of 4,000 people with hepatitis C. However, about a third of people with the liver disease don't know it. Many people at greater risk for HIV and hepatitis, including intravenous drug users and those not practising safer sex, are not getting tested and that is why the viruses continue to spread, he said. Educating higher-risk groups is essential, which is why outreach is a big part of the centre's work. The Masai Centre works closely with the AIDS Committee of Cambridge, Kitchener and Waterloo to connect people with support services and now Steingart has government funding to develop the same holistic approach for hepatitis patients. Accessing health and social services is difficult for marginalized groups, including those suffering from substance abuse or serious mental illness or experiencing homelessness, Steingart said. The International Federation of Red Cross said Friday governments are failing injecting drug users by treating them as criminals and denying health services they need to stop the spread of HIV. More than three million of the world's estimated 15.9 million injecting drug users are living with HIV, the organization reported. It urged more government support for harm reduction initiatives, including substitution therapy, condom distribution, education and needle exchange programs. Waterloo Region's needle exchange service has grown steadily since its launch 15 years ago, providing new needles, sterile water, alcohol swabs and other items for safer injecting to reduce the spread of blood-borne infections. Last year just under 3,000 people visited sites needle exchange sites located around the region - almost double the 1,600 in the previous year. More than 200,000 needles were handed out in 2009, up 17 per cent from 2008. "It has grown every year," said Lesley Rintche, manager of Public Health's sexual health and harm reduction programs. Meanwhile, infection rates have stabilized or decreased in recent years. New HIV cases had only small increases from 2005 to 2008, and then dropped by 57 per cent in 2009 to nine. Hepatitis C infections have been relatively stable over the past five years at about 100 new cases a year "This definitely helps to minimize the risk to the community," Rintche said. Medication now effectively treats HIV to extend and improve a person's life, Steingart said, although many people in the world suffering with the disease simply don't have access. "It's literally wiping out almost a whole generation of people in some parts of the world," he said. In Canada and other developed nations, the availability of powerful drugs has perhaps also lessened worries about HIV/AIDS compared to decades ago when the deadly virus appeared, Steingart said. Even with treatment, it is a difficult diagnosis. "It's a manageable illness," Steingart said, "but by no means is it something easy to live with." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt