Le plus grand programme d’échange de seringues américain offre des pipes de méthamphétamine à Seattle

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Le plus grand programme d’échange de seringues américain offre des pipes de méthamphétamine à Seattle

28 mai 2015

La dotation de pipes de méthamphétamine aux usagers de drogues peut éviter l’usage d’aiguilles, qui sont beaucoup plus dangereuses, surtout si l'utilisateur les partage avec une autre personne infectée par le VIH ou l'hépatite C. Pour en savoir plus, en anglais, veuillez lire les informations ci-dessous.

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Occasional crystal meth smoker Richard Russell ambles up to a church storage garage in a Seattle alley and a recovering drug addict hands him two brand new meth pipes, no questions asked.

One of about two dozen methamphetamine users who received free bubble-ended pipes on a recent afternoon, Russell is a participant in a pioneering but illegal program launched in March that aims to indirectly curb infectious diseases.

The theory behind the handout program is that giving meth pipes to drug users may steer some away from needles, which are far riskier than smoking, especially if the user is sharing with another person infected with HIV or hepatitis C.

There is little scientific evidence to support that claim, but The People's Harm Reduction Alliance, a privately funded needle-swap group run by drug users, said it has distributed more than 1,000 pipes in Seattle in a matter of weeks and could expand to other cities in Washington state and Oregon.

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