1 / 19

Overdose: A major preventable cause of death in Eastern Europe and Central Asia

Overdose: A major preventable cause of death in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Shona Schonning. Eurasian Harm Reduction Network (EHRN). Founded in 1997, Secretariat in Vilnius, Lithuania 260 members: GOs, NGOs, drug user organizations

crescent
Download Presentation

Overdose: A major preventable cause of death in Eastern Europe and Central Asia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Overdose: A major preventable cause of death in Eastern Europe and Central Asia Shona Schonning

  2. Eurasian Harm Reduction Network (EHRN) • Founded in 1997, Secretariat in Vilnius, Lithuania • 260 members: GOs, NGOs, drug user organizations • Exchange news, information, skills (over 700 people get email listserve) • Generate, identify new knowledge (research) • Build partnerships • Support advocacy initiatives • Provide technical assistance (through the Harm Reduction Knowledge Hub and through the Civil Society Action Team (CSAT)

  3. Eurasian Harm Reduction Network PROGRAM AREAS • Networking and information work • Harm Reduction Knowledge Hub • Advocacy and policy work • Special programs (including CSAT on GFATM and civil society role) PRIORITY TOPICS • drug policy, overdose, opioid substitution therapy, stigma and discrimination

  4. Overdose In Western Europe: • OD is the number 1 of death of opiate injectors where data is collected systematically • OD is the number 2 cause of death of youth in Europe So what’s up in Eastern Europe?

  5. Overdose in Eastern Europe and Central Asia Countries studied: Latvia, Kyrgystan, Romania, Russia and Tajikistan Information gathered on: • Epidemiology • Services • Knowledge & skills, • Local & national policy

  6. Epidemiology Data available was minimal, unreliable and likely to underestimate due to: • Poor data collection • Limited access to toxicological resources • Stigma • Concern about police involvement Drug user surveys done in Russia and Latvia provided useful information

  7. Barriers to good data • Not a priority • Not understood as preventable • No responsible agency • Requires medical examiner / forensic infrastructure • Requires identification of overdose as indicator or reportable cause of death • Requires consistent definition of overdose death • Social stigma (+/- registry) • Financial consideration of providers and families

  8. Estimates • Based on: • 20% of IDU experience OD within a year • 4 out of 100 OD result in death * Number of officially registered drug users

  9. Cause of death among people living with AIDS in Russia where over 80% of PLHIV are IDU N.N Ladnaya of the Federal AIDS Center of the Russian Federation made on November 1, 2007

  10. The good news about OD: OD death can be reduced! • Distributing nalaxone reduces overdose death • to drug users (through HR programs and pharmacies) • to emergency services (ambulances & hospitals) • Access to addiction treatment including OST programs have strong impact • Safer injection rooms

  11. Cost-benefit ~10-20% of naloxone prescriptions are used in overdose X ~4% of opiate overdoses result in death = ~0.4-0.8% of naloxone kits may result in a life saved that would otherwise be lost at a price of $3 per 2 naloxone vials in each kit  $375-750 per life saved (excluding program costs)

  12. Services • Hospital-based care was accessible but limited by • Distance • Ambulance availability • Limited nalaxone availability • Fear of police • Few (but very successful) pilot programs to distribute nalaxone to drug users & their communities • OST available only on pilot level and still prohibited in Russia and Tajikistan

  13. Good practices in Khorog, Tadjikistan NGO Volunter distributes nalaxone to • Hospitals • Emergency services • Drug users and their family & friends

  14. Opiate ODs by EMS in Khorog Tajikistan

  15. Opiate ODs in ER, Khorog Tajikistan

  16. OD prevention program of Russian Harm Reduction Network “There were three of us shooting up at a friend’s place. One guy overdosed. I had nalaxon on me given to me by the project staff. After giving him an injection of nalaxon he got to his feet abruptly and didn’t even realize what had happened to him. Thanks to nalaxon his life was saved. Now I always have nalaxone with me and I am really gratful to the harm reduction program for educating me.” - Client in Biysk “ Two weeks after we started the project people having heard about a miraculous medication and the vials went like hot cakes at the next outreach session.” – project staff in Samara “It goes without say that we should continue this work” – outreach worker” – Naberezhni Chelni outreach worker

  17. Policy • Often not seen as a priority: rarely addressed in policy documents • Not clear which agency is responsible • In Tajikistan it is addressed in national policy documents • Latvia considering addressing OD in their HIV program • EU Action Plan on Drugs calls for OD programming • Contradictory laws about reporting to police • No laws to protect witnesses from police

  18. Recommendations POLICY • Prioritize OD • Identify responsible agency • Use EU policy to advocate for national response SERVICES • Nalaxone access (peer-driven & EMS) • Scale-up of access to addiction care including OST RESEARCH FUNDING (for advocacy & services)

  19. EHRN contacts • www.harm-reduction.org • info@harm-reduction.org

More Related