God, AIDS, Africa & HOPE

Reflections / Gedanken

POZ Magazine: Considering Cannabis – e.g. USA

In states where it is legal, medical marijuana helps some HIV-positive people cope with living their lives.

In the states of California and Washington, since 1996 and 1998, respectively, medical marijuana has been legally available for people with HIV, cancer and other serious health challenges. Heading west this past spring from my home in Connecticut, I set out to learn about the states’ medi-pot programs. Okay, I admit it. I also hoped to score a bit of medicine, too.
Nationally, 14 states plus the District of Columbia allow medical marijuana use. Most of these consider anyone with HIV/AIDS eligible for medical pot. Many HIV-positive people use marijuana to treat nausea, appetite loss, the pain of neuropathy, chronic bowel problems and even anxiety. “When appropriately prescribed and monitored,” the American Academy of HIV Medicine stated in 2007, “marijuana/cannabis can provide immeasurable benefits for the health and well-being of our patients.”

So it is not surprising that some people with HIV use marijuana for medical purposes, whether it’s legal or not. And a whopping 89 percent of the men participating in the long-term Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) acknowledged using pot, though they weren’t asked whether it was legally obtained.  In Seattle, I interviewed Robert Wood, MD, recently retired AIDS chief for the Seattle/King County public health department. Based on his experience, which dates to the early 1980s, Wood said pot helps many positive people in the aforementioned ways. And while it seems to help some people sleep, he noted, it can have the opposite effect for others.  John Moore, a San Francisco man living with HIV since 2004, told me his doctor recommended pot to treat lipoatrophy. “Weed does not help lipoatrophy [a condition that results in loss of body fat], OK?” he said, fairly winking. But it can alleviate the emotional impact of lipo and other HIV side effects. “It provides a sense of well-being and allows me to get away temporarily from anxieties,” Moore said. “Some would say it’s an illusion, but so what? I think we should be looking at it like any other medicinal substance.”

Indeed, the placebo effect can be useful. As Josiah Rich, MD, professor of medicine and community health at Brown Medical School at Providence, Rhode Island, said: “Whether the benefit is from marijuana or from the belief that it is helping, it has a real effect for some people suffering from symptoms related to HIV or HIV meds.”  The road to legalization has been long. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine, which advises the federal government on scientific matters, asserted “the potential therapeutic value for cannabinoid drugs.” But it took until last year for the American Medical Association to sign on. Moreover, federal law still outlaws marijuana. But in 2009, the justice department directed prosecutors to lay off people using medical cannabis in states where it’s legal. In San Francisco, the city instructed the police department not to arrest people for having medical marijuana. Apparently, the directive worked. “I get on the bus in the morning,” Moore said, “and the whole thing reeks of weed because so many people are carrying it.”
Unfortunately for me, California, like all the other medical pot states, limits the use of legal marijuana to state residents. Only a few states offer reciprocity for visitors from other legal-marijuana states who run out of medicine.
Obtaining medical pot is a pretty standard process for residents of the states offering it. First, you need a doctor’s medical recommendation (not a prescription). If having HIV isn’t enough, your doctor will want to know what specific ailments you are trying to address.
The referral—and a fee, ranging from $100 in Michigan to $150 in Nevada—will get you a one-year, state-issued ID card, usually from the state health department. Some states have dedicated medical pot offices, such as Vermont’s Marijuana Registry. The ID card allows you to avoid arrest and—important for people with compromised immune systems—avoid low-quality marijuana, possibly mixed with mystery compounds. You might pick up your new medicine in a state-licensed dispensary or “compassion center,” as Rhode Island calls them. In most states, a license also entitles you to grow a limited amount of pot. (See sidebar for further details.) Moore described the San Francisco dispensary he uses as a trailer-type building—like a teashop, but with bulletproof glass. “Behind [that] glass,” he explains, “is a woman sitting with a cash register. A white board on the wall lists what they have. Then there are big jars with different types [of cannabis]”—bearing names such as Purple Haze and White Widow. “Everything is priced by an eighth of an ounce,” Moore said. Prices are as high as $60 for high-quality grass, to a mere $20 for what’s commonly called “shake,” the stems and seeds that can be added to melted butter to make a spread. Insurance companies and third-party payers won’t (yet?) pay for medical marijuana, so it’s all out of pocket.

I didn’t see the dispensary, but Moore did take me into a smoke shop on 18th Street, half a block from the intersection of Castro, and pointed out the shelf of vaporizers. Instead of smoking, he uses one of these. “You put the weed in this little mesh chamber at the end of a short hose,” he said. “And you attach that above a heating element that heats but does not burn the herb, then inhale from the other end.“  Smoking pot can harm the lungs, the Institute of Medicine first warned in 1999. In contrast, vaporizers produce “little or no exposure” to the unhealthy chemicals smoking generates, including carbon monoxide and benzene, according to University of California at San Francisco researchers, led by longtime HIV and cancer doctor Donald Abrams, MD. What’s more, they found that a vaporizer produced higher plasma levels of THC (tetrahydrocannabinol, marijuana’s 
active ingredient) than smoking. Back in Providence, in his HIV clinic, Josiah Rich recommends a vaporizer to avoid lung damage. “But,” he adds, “smoking small amounts is not unreasonable.” In the name of research, I tried a vaporizer. As promised, the device eliminates the coughing and irritation associated with smoking weed. Beyond the known risks of smoking, there’s been at least a squeak of a warning about cannabis for people with HIV—from a “humanized” mouse. Researchers at UCLA infected a specially engineered mouse with an HIV-like virus, then gave it THC. They concluded the cellular damage they observed could mean that THC might slightly speed up the progress of untreated HIV. But Abrams found that neither smoked nor synthetic THC—dronabinol, in prescription Marinol tablets—affects viral load or interacts with HIV meds. In fact, he said, the research shows that marijuana “actually improved immune function after 21 days of smoking three times a day.” And so far, no other research has confirmed those mousy data. All medications have side effects and trade-offs. For example, the side effects of the HIV meds I take are diarrhea, headache, nausea, stomach pain or upset, tiredness, vomiting and weakness. By contrast, marijuana, whose most common side effect is “euphoric mood,” stacks up amazingly well.
Source: http://www.poz.com/articles/Medical_Marijuana_HIV_2521_18907.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, HIV Treatment, Medical and Research, Politics and Society, , , , , ,

POZ Magazine: Positive Justice Project Seeks to End HIV Criminalization

The Center for HIV Law and Policy (CHLP) has launched the Positive Justice Project, a campaign to repeal laws that create HIV-specific crimes or laws that increase penalties for people with HIV who are convicted of criminal offenses, according to a CHLP statement. Currently, the United States has more HIV-specific criminal cases than any other in the nation, with more than 400 prosecutions to date. However, research has shown HIV criminalization statutes don’t reduce HIV rates. In fact, they might increase HIV rates by stigmatizing at-risk groups and discouraging HIV testing.

To read the CHLP statement, click here.

Source:  http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/Positive_Justice_Project_1_19173.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, Society and living environment, , , ,

POZ Magazine: Zimbabwe President Wants Compulsory HIV Testing

Robert Mugabe, president of Zimbabwe, wants compulsory HIV testing in his country, the Voice of America (VOA) reports. Mugabe told Chinese state television that health professionals would only conduct compulsory HIV testing to identify those in need of treatment. He acknowledged a lack of international agreement on compulsory HIV testing because of human rights concerns would have to be addressed before he could ask the Zimbabwean government to allow it.

To read the VOA article, click here.

Source:  http://www.poz.com/articles/zimbabwe_mugabe_testing_1_19170.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, , , , , ,

UN: SWAZILAND: A culture that encourages HIV/AIDS

Anecdotal evidence that entrenched cultural beliefs among Swazis actively encourage the spread of HIV/AIDS has been confirmed by a joint government and UN report. The study by UN the Population Fund (UNFPA) and Swaziland’s Ministry of Health and Social Welfare – The State of the Swaziland Population – echoes warnings by local NGOs that “AIDS cannot be stopped unless there is a change in people’s sexual behaviour.” Despite consistent efforts to curtail the most severe AIDS epidemic in the world, it appears to have gained ground. “Swazis are very traditional people, and their sexual behaviour is inbred and totally against safe sexual practices, like condom use and monogamous relationships, that limit the spread of HIV,” Thandi Mngomezulu, an HIV testing counsellor in Manzini, the country’s main commercial city, told IRIN. The report, based on focus groups and surveys, found that maintaining a centuries-old cultural belief in procreation to increase the population size, was having devastating consequences in the age of AIDS.

“It’s helpful to have scientific data to focus our efforts. For instance, the study shows that Swazis believe it is ideal if a Swazi woman has a minimum of five children. We can ask people why this is, and how to counter the belief,” said Mngomezulu. Joseph Dlamini, a pastor and youth guidance counsellor, told researchers that “It all boils down to this: Nothing must stand in the way of procreation. Increase the population at all cost.” However, he noted that this belief had come about when the population was a tenth of its present size of about one million. “All humans have sexual urges, but behaviour is determined by social norms. Swazis still believe that a woman’s role is to bear children continuously, and that a man’s role is to impregnate multiple partners, which is why polygamy is so strong here, both as an institution and in the minds of young men, who may not ever get married but still have many children from multiple girlfriends,” Dlamini said. A survey of nearly 2,000 women attending antenatal clinics in the country’s four regions found that 42 percent tested HIV positive in 2008, up 3 percent from the last survey, in 2006.
If population growth was the social factor prompting sexual behaviour, the report found it ironic that sexual practices intended to boost the population had opened the door to AIDS and decreased life expectancy. In 2000 life expectancy was 61 years; now it is 32 years, according to the Human Development Index of the UN Development Programme.
“In Swazi culture, decision-making has traditionally been a male prerogative. Family-planning decisions, therefore, lie with the man,” the study found.

“Women report that they have been subjected to continuous childbirth by their husbands or in-laws, against their will. Researchers noted that Swazi men strongly defended the practice of “kungena”, or wife inheritance, whereby a widow becomes the wife of the deceased man’s brother, a practice found to spread HIV.
Swazi men defended polygamy as a cultural necessity, but also lamented lapsed cultural practices they said could stop the spread of HIV/AIDS, like “kuhlawula”, in terms of which men or boys who impregnated unmarried women were fined five cows by their community elders, but these laws were no longer enforced.
Another cultural factor was gender preference – often insisted upon by in-laws – that a woman bear a boy. The birth of a birth of a girl is immediately followed by an effort to have a male heir, because in traditional law only a boy can lead a family into its next generation.  Other data followed established patterns in developing countries: where there is urbanization and a more educated populace, birth rates decline. Swaziland is mainly rural, but in the northern Hhohho Region, where the capital, Mbabane, is located, the fertility rate is 3.6 children per female, compared to 4.3 children in the underdeveloped southern Shiselweni Region. The fertility rate among women whose education finished at primary school was 5.1, but only 2.4 – less than half the number of children – among students who advanced to tertiary education. The poorest Swazi women have a fertility rate of 5.5, while the figure among the richest is only 2.6 children. “The rich/poor fertility divide is testament to the lack of a government social safety net – like a good pension scheme for the elderly – so, for those without assets, their only security comes from lots of children, who together can support their parents when they are older,” said Tanya Kunene, a social welfare officer in Manzini Region.
The study found that, like many traditional societies, Swazis lived in isolation and were generally suspicious of other cultures – practices like monogamy, family planning and birth control were considered foreign and suspect.
That may be changing. According to the study, some survey participants “called for the recognition of multiculturalism in Swaziland, which would create tolerance for other cultures co-existing with our own”, and thus make “foreign” practices found to be effective in curbing HIV/AIDS more acceptable.
Source:

http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?Reportid=83937

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Reflection, Society and living environment, Uncategorized, , , , ,

POZ Magazine: Africa and China Partner to Fight HIV/AIDS

Leaders from Africa and China have come together in a new partnership to make progress toward the U.N. Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which include strengthening the global response to HIV/AIDS, according to a Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) statement. The countries involved seek to end an era of working in isolation by sharing technologies, promoting innovation, strengthening health care systems and improving access to social welfare programs.

To read the UNAIDS statement, click here

Source:

http://www.poz.com/rssredir/articles/South_South_Partnership_1_19175.shtml

Filed under: HIV and AIDS, Politics and Society, , , ,

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