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Getting High on HIV Drugs in S Africa

More news stories on South Africa

Alka Marwaha, BBC News, December 8, 2008

Anti-retroviral drugs used to treat HIV/Aids are being bought and smoked by teenagers in South Africa to get high.

Reports suggest that the drugs are being sold by patients and even healthcare staff for money.

Schoolchildren have been spotted smoking the drugs, which are ground into powder and sometimes mixed with painkillers or marijuana.

Aids patients themselves have been found smoking the drugs instead of taking them as prescribed.

Anti-retrovirals are used to boost the immune system of people with HIV and to suppress the virus in the blood.

“I couldn’t believe it. I was shocked at first, these were school boys in their school uniforms,” documentary-maker Tooli Nhlapo told the BBC World Service’s Outlook programme.

“They take a pill and grind it, until it is a powder. Some also mix it with painkillers and others mix it with marijuana,” said Ms Nhlapo. “They showed me how they roll it and smoke it.”

Hallucinogenic

When the South African Broadcasting Corporation documentary-maker first investigated the story, she was told to wait until school finished, so she could actually see how young some of the users were.

“I thought I was going to go to a tavern and see older drug addicts doing this, but I was shocked when I saw school children,” she said.

“One who spoke to me very frankly was only 15 and the oldest person I spoke to was 21, but it’s mainly youngsters, teenagers.”

Smoking the pills has a hallucinogenic and relaxing effect.

“When I asked them why they like doing it, they said it helps them relax and forget about their problems,” said Ms Nhlapo.

“When you look at them, just a few seconds after taking it, they are in another world,” she added.

The children do not know where they are and they stop making sense.

The young users that Ms Nhlapo spoke to get access to these drugs from HIV patients or healthcare workers.

They know when the individual patients go to collect the drugs and buy them, or if they do not have any money, they steal them.

“When I was doing the story, many HIV patients were complaining that they don’t get the drugs and that queues are long and it was taking a long time to access them,” said Ms Nhlapo.

Widespread problem

Dr Kas Kasongo, who advises on an anti-retroviral drugs panel in South Africa, feels that there needs to be some measure of accountability or a system to be able to track the usage of drugs.

“We need pharmacists and good administrators but again it is a social problem,” he said.

“I don’t think our role as doctors should be to just dish out drugs. We have to make sure that these drugs are taken as recommended.”

When Ms Nhlapo first came across this new drug phenomenon, she thought it was just happening in one area, among a small group of people.

“I went back to the township and then I discovered that it was something that was known in the entire township,” she said.

It had now become a national problem in South Africa, she added.

Dr Kasongo continued: “Not taking the optimum dose as recommended will not suppress the virus and the CD4 count will be destroyed massively and that’s what we are trying to prevent by giving anti-retroviral medication.”

Side-effects

Most anti-retroviral drugs can be given to both children and adults, Dr Kasongo said. But there was one exception.

“There is one that is being abused that should only be used above the age of three or four years,” he added.

“Remember we are giving anti-retroviral drugs to those infected with HIV, who will eventually develop Aids.

“So, people who are healthy, that are taking this medication are exposing themselves to potential side-effects of these drugs,” he added.

HIV patients are exposing themselves to huge risks by not taking the prescribed drugs as they should, he warned.

“We don’t have more than 20 anti-retroviral drugs on the market and remember, they have to be used in a cocktail of at least three or four,” said Dr Kasongo.

“Therefore, abusing a particular drug, whichever it is, is a concern because it can give rise to resistance to drugs within that same group,” he added.

Dr Kasongo stressed that it will take a huge team effort, involving the government, social workers and education authorities to combat the problem.

“It is well organised, no matter how high they are, they do not tell you who is giving them the drugs,” said Ms Nhlapo.

Original article

(Posted on December 10, 2008)

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Comments

1 — 24/7 wrote at 5:22 PM on December 10:

Well, then we should forget them. They are their own problem. We can’t help someone who won’t help themselves.

I quit drinking. I’ve never done hard drugs. I havent’ had a drink in 8 years. I never want any. I would have been a problem. I took responsibility for myself.

2 — Sleep wrote at 6:13 PM on December 10:

There are even reports of people *robbing* HIV patients to get the drugs:

http://www.poz.com/articles/stocrin_marijuana_hiv_1_14881.shtml

3 — FSO wrote at 6:22 PM on December 10:

Knowing what I do about African corruption, my opinion is that this is a cover story. African governments get those drugs either very cheaply or free from blackmailed western goverments and drug companies.

The corrupt black S. africans probably are stealing the drugs and selling them on the world market. That is why the drugs are disappearing. That’s why there are such long lines. The drugs have been sold out of the country.

4 — Anonymous wrote at 7:31 PM on December 10:

We can laugh at this, but I’ve witnessed white inner city teenagers sniffing glue. Frankly, I can’t remember what it was, glue, paint. It was something toxic.

5 — S.L. Cain wrote at 1:56 AM on December 11:

“We can laugh at this, but I’ve witnessed white inner city teenagers sniffing glue.

Posted by at 7:31 PM on December 10”

And I don’t care about them, either.

6 — KC wrote at 8:37 AM on December 11:

“Anti-retroviral drugs used to treat HIV/Aids are being bought and smoked by teenagers in South Africa to get high.Reports suggest that the drugs are being sold by patients and even healthcare staff for money.”

All I have to say is only in Africa!!!!

7 — William Hendershot wrote at 9:09 AM on December 11:

Remember when Bush was running against Kerry and Bush said “I’ll give $15 billion for aids in Africa” and Kerry responded “I’ll give $30 billion”? Money well spent.

8 — q wrote at 10:10 AM on December 11:

“Dr Kasongo stressed that it will take a huge team effort, involving the government, social workers and education authorities to combat the problem.”

Of course a better idea would be to begin a whisper campaign on all the campuses in the US, asserting that the blame for these “youths” to be smoking their medication instead of ingesting it as prescrobed is a US plot to exterminate Africans. Then, of course, gibbering bird-brained professors can reinforce the belief after they’ve bought into it.

All that’s necessary after that is to get a large number of white idiots to burn down a few buildings or chain themselves together at the front gates so no one can get in, until promises are made to send more aid to help the “Aids epidemic in Africa.”

Then songs will be written and sung over and over and over again by zonked out nitwits who are able to pay top dollar for their medicated candy, long after they remember why they began singing such atrocious lies in the first place.

And, VOILA! Another politically correct tenant is born and given wings.

So don’t EVER criticize it or the thought police will be on you relentlessly.

9 — tomcat wrote at 1:39 PM on December 11:

Why give money to africa???? The people who benefit are the corrupt government just like here in America…politicians here, will never go hungry or without. Politicians in this country should be sent to africa if they care so much and stay there. I am of the mindset now, that this country could do better with minutemen to protect and defend.

10 — Not a Union Man wrote at 9:55 AM on December 12:


“The children do not know where they are and they stop making sense.”


Yes, yes, we know — but what are the effects of the drugs?

The only organization in the world more useless than the EU is the AU. Notice how they both have “Union” in the name. Guess you could say I’m “not a Union man.”


11 — Superman wrote at 11:24 AM on December 14:

The only organization in the world more useless than the EU is the AU. Notice how they both have “Union” in the name. Guess you could say I’m “not a Union man.”
Posted by Not a Union Man at 9:55 AM on December 12

Are you forgetting the United Nations?

12 — Pam wrote at 6:11 PM on December 21:

When I predicted, in a previous post, that AIDS drugs would not be taken properly on the Dark Continent, I did not imagine such an abuse. I COULD not imagine such a thing.

In Africa, apparently, if it’s not good to eat, and you can’t have sex with it, then the next thing you try to do with it is to roll it up and smoke it.

Next time some little twit asks me if I want to contribute to ‘ending AIDS in Africa’, I’ll have a real good reason for why not.
THANKS, AMREN!


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