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The costs and benefits of a prison needle and syringe program in Australia, 2025–30: a modelling study

Description

The Australian government has committed to meeting the 2030 hepatitis C virus (HCV) elimination targets set by the World Health Organization. These targets include reducing the annual number of new HCV infections to fewer than two per 100 people who inject drugs, and providing annual needle and syringe program coverage of 300 needles and syringes per person who injects drugs. Needle and syringe programs are internationally endorsed, evidence‐based public health interventions that reduce the spread of bloodborne viruses and the incidence of injection‐related infections.

Australia is one of ten countries classified as having high needle and syringe program coverage, and the estimated number of needles and syringes distributed per person who injects drugs is the highest in the world. In addition, the introduction of subsidised direct‐acting antiviral medications (DAAs) in March 2016 reduced the prevalence of chronic HCV infections among people who inject drugs in the community from 51% in 2015 to 12% in 2022. However, recent declines in testing and treatment have jeopardised progress toward HCV elimination.

This MJA Research shares more.


Details

Authors: Farah Houdroge, Samantha Colledge‐Frisby, Nadine Kronfli, Rebecca J Winter, Joanne Carson, Mark Stoove and Nick Scott

Article Type: Research

CPD Activity Details
Provider
MJA
Domain
Educational Activities
Type
General Learning
Activity
Professional reading
CPD Hours
0h : 30m
Topic
Infectious Diseases, Health Services Administration, Social Determinants of Health
Audience
Medical practitioners
Applicable CAPE Aspects
_
Effective Year

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Accepted by

*Medical Board of Australia’s (MBA)’s revised Registration Standard: Continuing professional development (the Standard)