This new IHRD report details successful efforts from around the world to offer drug users antiretroviral treatment (ARV) and the dangers of failing to do so.
Breaking Down Barriers was released during the XV International AIDS Conference in Bangkok, Thailand, at the satellite meeting "HIV Treatment for Drug Users: A Realistic Goal." That meeting, which called for greater inclusion of drug users in HIV treatment efforts, was organized by a coalition of leading international AIDS organizations including IHRD, the Central and Eastern European Harm Reduction Network, the European AIDS Treatment Group, Gay Men's Health Crisis, the Thai Drug Users' Network, and the Thai AIDS Treatment Action Group. Jim Kim, MD, director of the World Health Organization's HIV/AIDS program, served as co-chair of the meeting.
"Available data show clearly that drug users, offered proper support from the health sector, receive the same benefits from treatment as other people with HIV," Kim said at a press conference before the meeting. "Yet drug users are routinely written off as unreachable and noncompliant. In an increasing number of countries, failure to offer HIV treatment to drug users means that an effective response to the epidemic is being fatally compromised."
Breaking Down Barriers categorically refutes negative assumptions about IDUs' ability and desire to be treated for HIV infection. It also presents examples of innovative HIV treatment programs for drug users in a wide variety of countries, including Argentina, Brazil, France, Hong Kong, Russia, Spain, and the United States.
Read more
Harm Reduction for All
A Lifesaving Loan: A New Investment to Help Curb the U.S. Overdose Crisis

For over a decade, the small Remedy Alliance nonprofit has revolutionized providing lifesaving healthcare for people who use drugs. Our new investment will help the group increase access to the overdose antidote naloxone.
Drug Policy
Three Decades of Drug Policy Reform Work

Over the past 30 years, Open Society has been the largest philanthropic supporter of efforts to reform drug policy and promote harm reduction around the world. This is a timeline of the Foundations’ pathbreaking work.
WAR IS OVER?
How the United States Fueled a Global Drug War, and Why It Must End

As U.S. domestic drug policy reform gains momentum, it is time the United States makes a concerted effort to de-escalate the failed war on drugs elsewhere.