© 2013 Melissa Adele JardineBackground and rationale: The HIV epidemic in Vietnam has from its start been concentrated among injecting drug users. Vietnam instituted the 2006 HIV/AIDS Law which includes comprehensive harm reduction measures, but these are unevenly accepted and inadequately implemented. Ward police are a major determinant of risk for injecting drug users (IDUs), required to participate in drug control practices (especially meeting quotas for detention centres) which impede support for harm reduction. Influences on ward level police regarding harm reduction were studied in Hanoi to learn how to better target education and structural change. Methods: After document review, key inf...
In 2003 the Government of Cambodia officially began to recognise that harm reduction was an essentia...
Background: Interactions with police shape the HIV risk environment for people who inject drugs (PWI...
BACKGROUND:Policing practices such as syringe confiscation and arrest can act as important social-st...
BACKGROUND AND RATIONALE: The HIV epidemic in Vietnam has from its start been concentrated among inj...
Abstract The findings of our research show that while police play multiple roles in the fight agains...
Throughout the 1990s, Vietnam experienced a dramatic rise in the prevalence of HIV among people who ...
Historically, the response of the Vietnamese government to illicit drug use and HIV has been slow an...
The response to drug use in Laos has focused on reducing opium supply (supply reduction) and rates o...
Objectives. To determine how harm reduction should be applied in low-resource countries such as Viet...
The suppression of drug consumption and trade is high on the Government of Vietnam’s agenda. To acco...
Provides an overview of police practices that block drug users' access to harm reduction efforts and...
Background: Injection drug users represent the largest proportion of all HIV reported cases in Viet ...
After declaring a “War on Drugs” in 2003, Malaysia adopted harm reduction as official policy in 2006...
Introduction: Cambodian law enforcement's limited acceptance of harm reduction has hindered HIV prog...
In line with trends in other countries the Royal Thai Police acknowledges the need for more communit...
In 2003 the Government of Cambodia officially began to recognise that harm reduction was an essentia...
Background: Interactions with police shape the HIV risk environment for people who inject drugs (PWI...
BACKGROUND:Policing practices such as syringe confiscation and arrest can act as important social-st...
BACKGROUND AND RATIONALE: The HIV epidemic in Vietnam has from its start been concentrated among inj...
Abstract The findings of our research show that while police play multiple roles in the fight agains...
Throughout the 1990s, Vietnam experienced a dramatic rise in the prevalence of HIV among people who ...
Historically, the response of the Vietnamese government to illicit drug use and HIV has been slow an...
The response to drug use in Laos has focused on reducing opium supply (supply reduction) and rates o...
Objectives. To determine how harm reduction should be applied in low-resource countries such as Viet...
The suppression of drug consumption and trade is high on the Government of Vietnam’s agenda. To acco...
Provides an overview of police practices that block drug users' access to harm reduction efforts and...
Background: Injection drug users represent the largest proportion of all HIV reported cases in Viet ...
After declaring a “War on Drugs” in 2003, Malaysia adopted harm reduction as official policy in 2006...
Introduction: Cambodian law enforcement's limited acceptance of harm reduction has hindered HIV prog...
In line with trends in other countries the Royal Thai Police acknowledges the need for more communit...
In 2003 the Government of Cambodia officially began to recognise that harm reduction was an essentia...
Background: Interactions with police shape the HIV risk environment for people who inject drugs (PWI...
BACKGROUND:Policing practices such as syringe confiscation and arrest can act as important social-st...