China opened 206 methadone
clinics between July and September this year bringing the total to
307 in a bid to curb the spread of HIV/AIDS through contaminated
needles used by drug addicts, the Ministry of Health said in Hubei Province on Thursday.
Forty-four percent of an estimated 650,000 Chinese
people living with HIV/AIDS are drug users, according to a report
released by the ministry earlier this year.
Methadone is widely used as a substitute for heroin to
help addicts kick their habit.
Wu Zunyou, an official at the Chinese Center for
Diseases Control and Prevention, said China opened the 307 clinics
three months ahead of the schedule.
He said that the swift establishment of the clinic
could reduce the intake of heroin by over 1,000
kilograms.
The methadone treatment program, which was initiated
in 2003, now covers about two thirds of all China's 31 provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities. At the clinics, a cup of
methadone drink usually costs 10 yuan (US$1.26).
Wu said China plans to set up methadone clinics in all
its cities and counties which have over 500 registered drug users
by the end of 2007.
Health experts said that the initiative can help to
rein in drug use and stop HIV infections being transferred from
high-risk drug users to the general population.
To curb the rising HIV infection rate nationwide, the
Chinese central and local governments more than doubled funds for
prevention and treatment to 1.08 billion yuan (US$136.5 million) in
2005 from 490 million yuan (US$61.9 million)in 2003.
According to the United Nations AIDS agency UNAIDS,
around 65 million people worldwide have been infected with HIV and
AIDS has killed more than 25 million since it was first recognized
in 1981.
(Xinhua News Agency October 20, 2006)
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