Are Cocaine Abusers at Risk for HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis?



Yes. Cocaine abusers, especially those who inject, are at increased risk for contracting such infectious diseases as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV/AIDS) and hepatitis. In fact, use and abuse of illegal drugs, including crack cocaine, have become the leading risk factors for new cases of HIV/AIDS.



Drug use-related spread of HIV can result from direct transmission of the virus through the sharing of contaminated needles and paraphernalia between injecting drug users. It can also result from indirect transmission, such as an HIV-infected mother transmitting the virus perinatally to her child. This is particularly alarming, given that more than 60 percent of new AIDS cases are women.



Research has also determined that drug abuse can interfere with judgement about risk-taking behavior, and can potentially lead to lessened precautions about sexual activity, the sharing of needles and injection paraphernalia, and the trading of sex for drugs, by both men and women.



Additionally, hepatitis C is spreading rapidly among injection drug users; current estimates indicate infection rates of 65 to 90 percent in this population. At present, there is no vaccine for the hepatitis C virus, and the only treatment is expensive, often unsuccessful, and may have serious side effects.