Prison

HIV Prevention in Prison

Today I visited PSI's HIV prevention activities in Mexico's largest prison.  The program activities consist of regular workshops to raise awareness of HIV risks, improve knowledge of modes of transmission and prevention, and build skills around condom use and condom negotiation.  A group of peer educators recruited from the prison population distribute condoms and engage in one-on-one interpersonal dialogues with other prisoners.

Having lengthy discussions with the peer educators really highlighted for me how much peer educators can benefit from particpating in such programs.  They were incredibly dynamic, knowledgable and enthusiastic about their work despite the fact that they often experienced stigma from prisoners who assume they are gay or HIV-positive.  One peer educator is HIV-positve and due to his status would typically be transferred to a maximum security prison known for its violence, however, because of his active participation in the program he has been allowed to stay in the current facility.

The visit also underscored the many misconceptions held by this prison population about HIV transmission especially in the context of men who have sex with men.  Most of the prisoners did not self-identify as gay; only receptive sexual partners were categorized as gay, and risk perception was low.  read more »

 Cambodia’s Crackdown on People Who Use Drugs – An interview with Holly Bradford



Length: 8:22 Beginning in the middle of June, the Cambodian government has swept up hundreds of people who use drugs, sex workers, and homeless people following passage of a USA-backed anti-human trafficking law.  People have been detained without charges in Khmer Rouge era camps in appalling conditions, without access to HIV and TB medications and other healthcare. Soon after the crisis started, Korsang, a Phnom Penh based harm reduction organization, went 24-7 to provide housing, nutrition, medical care and harm reduction services to scores of people in danger of detention.  In this interview, Korsang co-founder Holly Bradford talks about what’s going on, and what Korsang needs to keep people safe. You can help Korsang by donating through the Chicago Recovery Alliance (be sure to write Korsang in the ‘Designation’ line).  read more »

 Still failing on HIV in prisons – An interview with Ralf Jürgens



Length: 5:45 There’s a lot to celebrate about progress on HIV prevention and treatment in communities around the world. That can’t be said about HIV in prisons. Thousands are sick or dying, and governments – and the AIDS movement – have in most cases utterly failed to protect prisoners. Ralf Jürgens, the founding director of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network and a longtime advocate for prisoners’ rights, speaks in this interview about the need to refocus attention on prison HIV, and recent progress on prison harm reduction programming.

 Guns and leg irons vs. syringe exchange and methadone – Mauro Guarinieri on Vietnam’s response to HIV



Length: 11:16 With his partner and a beautiful new baby daughter, Mauro Guarinieri relocated to Hanoi at the beginning of 2008 to take up a position as an HIV advisor with Constella Futures Group. In the two decades before that, Mauro fought for drug user and PLWH rights, becoming chairman of the European AIDS Treatment Group, chair of the global board of GNP+, and working for a couple years at the Open Society Institute. In this interview, Mauro talks about the shape of Vietnam’s HIV epidemic, and the government’s fits-and-starts effort to introduce harm reduction programs while still relying largely on prison, coerced detox, and other means of social control aimed at those most at risk of infection.

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