Pubdate: Thu, 02 Dec 1999 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1999 Reuters Limited SYRINGE VENDING MACHINES POPULAR AMONG YOUNG DRUG USERS WESTPORT, Dec 02 (Reuters Health) - More than one fifth of injection drug users surveyed in Marseille, France, use vending machines as their primary source of syringes. "By reaching a different-in particular, a younger-group of injection drug users, syringe vending machines can further the prevention of HIV and other blood-borne infections," Dr. Yolande Obadia, of Institut Paoli Calmettes, in Marseille, and multinational colleagues say in the December issue of the American Journal of Public Health. Vending machines, which accept used syringes and dispense sterile ones in return, were introduced in Marseilles in 1996. The team surveyed injection drug users who obtained syringes from vending machines, pharmacies, and needle exchange programs. Of the 343 users identified, 21.3% reported using vending machines as their primary source of syringes. These primary users of vending machines were more likely than other injection drug users to be younger than 30 years of age, to have never received drug maintenance treatment, and to report not sharing needles or other drug injection paraphernalia, according to the report. These findings are of particular importance, the investigators say, since younger injection drug users are less likely to use needle exchange programs and pharmacies as a source of sterile needles. The study "...suggests that syringe vending machines can be a useful adjunct to existing needle exchange programs and pharmacy sales of sterile syringes without prescription," Dr Obadia and colleagues say. "Whether the introduction of syringe vending machines would be appropriate in contexts such as the United States, where participation of high-risk young and short-term injection drug users in needle exchange programs is also uncommon, merits consideration." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake