A new study found that only a small percent
of ex-inmates diagnosed with HIV filled a prescription for medicine to treat
the condition within the recommended 10 days.
According to the study conducted by researchers
at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston, ex-inmates who discontinue the antiretroviral
therapy are at high risk of developing complications from the disease, which
could result in greater infectiousness and higher levels of drug resistance.
For the study, the researchers looked at 2,115
HIV-infected inmates in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice prison system
between January 2004 and December 2007 who were receiving HIV medications
before release.
They found that only 5.4 percent filled a
prescription within the first 10 days of their prison release. After a month
from release, the percentage increased at 17 percent and at 30 percent within
the first two months of the release.
The study concluded that nearly 90 percent
of HIV-infected inmates had some interruption in their treatment.
The study is published in the February 25
issue of the Journal of the American
Medical Association. The study calls for greater coordination between state
and local agencies, health-care institutions, and community-based organizations
to reduce the high rate of treatment interruption among inmates who are newly
released from prison.
The researchers also noted that the U.S. prison
system has become an important front in efforts to curb the spread of the human
immunodeficiency virus, or HIV. They are offered HIV testing and the possibility
to initiate treatment during the time spent in jail.
Despite notable success in the global fight
against HIV/AIDS, 7,500 individuals contract HIV every day and at least 6,000
people die of AIDS every day.
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