Title: Drug Substitution Therapy in Manipur and Nagaland
1- Drug Substitution Therapy in Manipur and Nagaland
Dr Richard Di Natale Australian International
Health Institute HIV Interventions and Research
in North-East India Recent results from the
field Melbourne 5 July 2007
Implemented by the Emmanuel Hospital Association
in partnership with AIHI Funded by DFID,
Challenge Fund
2EHA Drug Substitution Therapy ProjectYear 1
Evaluation
- Contributors to final evaluation
- EHA
- Charan Sharma
- Rachel Kabi
- Tushimenla Imlong
- Umarani Chanu
- Dr Allen Chiru
- AIHI
- Dr Richard Di Natale
- Kerryn ORourke
- Melissa Yow
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5The EHA substitution project
- In February 2006, the UK Department for
International Development (DFID) funded a drug
substitution therapy project in northeast India
for one year - 1200 treatment places were allocated with a
further 600 places allocated after six months of
implementation
6- Goal
- To reduce the rate of HIV transmission in
Nagaland and Manipur related to injecting drug
use - Objective
- To build capacity in Nagaland and Manipur for
drug substitution therapy - To implement drug substitution therapy as an
integrated component of other harm reduction
services - Use NACP-III to facilitate take up by the Indian
government
7Pre-post study design
- Use client surveys to compare outcomes before
treatment and after treatment - Allows us to
- to develop a profile of our IDU population
- To analyse factors that affect treatment outcomes
- Compare across NGOs, states etc.
- However
- Also need to consider competing explanations
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9 10Pre-post study design
- All responses in the client surveys refer to the
previous one month - Forms included from May 2006-January 2007
- Treatment defined as a minimum of two days of
treatment
11Qualitative Data
- Monthly reports
- Monitoring Visits
- Focus Groups
- Case studies
12Inception phase
- March May 2006
- Recruitment of the EHA project team and NGO teams
- Development of clinical protocols
- Orientation and training program
- ME framework
13Staff recruitment and training
- Most positions were filled in March,
- Many staff had worked with IDUs or from an IDU
background - Staff turnover low
- Staff training included the following
- Harm reduction
- Drug substitution treatment
- Clinical aspects of DST
- Overview of buprenorphine side effects, dosing
- Roles and responsibilities of project staff
- Outreach and peer education
- Identifying and interacting with KPs
- Counselling
14Staff recruitment and training
- Referral and networking
- Community mobilisation
- OD management
- Abscess management
- Exposure trips
- Monitoring and evaluation
- Focus Group training
- Hep C / HIV/AIDS
- Log book maintenance
- Financial management
15Services offered by NGOs
- Administration of buprenorphine
- Advocacy/community sensitisation
- Health assessment of IDUs
- One-to-one/group counselling
- Referral services
- Education from peer educators and health
professionals - Outreach advocacy, recruitment, follow-up and
some administration of DST - Provision of medication for SEs (nausea,
drowsiness, constipation) and vitamins
16Drop in Centres
- Critical function
- Generally adequate but
- Problems with size, too congested and noisy
- Impact on local communities.
17Advocacy
- Some NGOs active in advocacy
- Pressure groups
- Womens groups
- Other NGOs
- Church groups
- Police
- Families and spouses of IDUs
- Youth
-
- Advocacy was particularly effective when it
involved people who had directly benefited from
treatment
18Recruitment of KPs
- Referral mainly through peers and IDU networks
- Large demand for treatment
- All NGOs had clients ready prior to start prior
to implementation
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20 21Total Intake Numbers 2267 By state Manipur
73 Nagaland 27 By gender Men 93 Women
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23Average age at intake 30.6yrs
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33Percentage of polydrug users at intake 55
34- Outcomes following Intake
35Outcomes
- 1. Still in treatment
- 2. Completed Treatment
- Clients have withdrawn from buprenorphine and
have not returned to their past pattern of drug
use at the time of discharge - 3. Relapse
- Clients cease treatment and return to their past
pattern of drug dependence - 4. Treatment ceased by NGO
- Assume that clients have returned to past pattern
of dependence - 5. Expired
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39Relapse
- Craving most common reason
- Some clients unable to meet expenses for daily
travel - Of those who relapsed due to side effects, the
most common SEs were vomiting, headache,
withdrawal (precipitated), loss of appetite,
insomnia, drowsiness -
- One quarter of who discontinued treatment did so
in the first week - Some IDU sex workers were pressured by their
partners to discontinue treatment.
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57- Influences on treatment outcomes
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64 65Gender
- Most women were treated at dedicated female IDU
sex worker NGO - Low intake of women due to a number of factors
- Lower overall prevalence
- Stigma and discrimination - drug use hidden
- Reluctant to attend centres with male clients and
male staff -
66Demand for DST
- One of the most serious problems was high demand
- Some NGOs filled all their available treatment
places quickly - Long waiting lists established by June or July.
- Impacted significantly on NGO staff
- Also some demand from non injecting drug users
67Outreach
- Services included
- Recruitment of clients
- Administering buprenorphine to those unable to
attend the DIC - Following up lost clients.
- However
- Many NGOs overwhelmed by the demand for outreach
services - Follow-up of clients in particular was often
difficult and time-consuming.
68Take-away doses
- NGOs approached this issue differently
- Given to clients living large distances from DICs
or sick clients - Family verification and involvement usually
required - Dependent on local capacity for outreach
69Diversion/misuse
- Few reported attempts
- No evidence that buprenorphine is being misused
in large quantities
.
70Mixing
- A few clients continued to use small amounts of
illicit drugs - Most NGOs tried hard initially to keep clients in
treatment
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73Challenges to client retention
- Time and costs associated with transport
- Population mobility
- Aggressive marketing tactics in response to
declining drug sales - Bandhs and strikes
- Peer outreach workers from user background
regularly exposed to illicit drugs
74Income generation
- Making equipment for the DIC
- Art and craft
- Kite making
- Envelope making
- Paper bag making
-
75Unheard voices
- One day I sent him to the shop to buy something
for the kitchen. It was a test to see if he will
do the job. He bought everything I told him to
buy and returned home with an amount of five
rupees in change. I was very happy that he came
back home with the change. This was the first
time he had ever done this. My son is a new
person. - Clients Mother
-
76Unheard voices
- Buprenorphine is like gold really more
precious than gold . - Clients wife
- the Drop in centre (DIC) is a place of God.
Clients wife - Because of treatment my fiancée has agreed to
marry me after treatment is over - Clients wife
- I cant remember having more rice than I did
this morning. I feel great. - Client
- There are no more thefts and fighting in the
family. The family atmosphere is much better
now. - Clients mother
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