Kaiser Family Foundation
The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation  
  Home Contact Us Email Subscriptions
Browse By Report Type

Syringe Exchange and AB 136: The Dynamics of Local Consideration in Six California Communities


More than one-third of all reported AIDS cases in the United States have occurred among injection drug users, their partners, and their children. Public health experts have identified access to sterile syringes as one component of a comprehensive HIV prevention strategy designed to reduce HIV transmission among injection drug users. However, others strongly oppose needle exchange, feeling that it promotes drug use and debates about syringe access continue, as does a federal ban on the use of federal funding for syringe exchange programs. This ban, combined with the fact that laws governing syringe access are generally the purview of the states, places the state and local policy role concerning syringe access at the center of the policy debate.

A new report by the Kaiser Family Foundation, Syringe Exchange and AB 136: The Dynamics of Local Consideration in Six California Communities, provides a qualitative assessment of California's Assembly Bill (AB) 136, which authorizes the operation of syringe exchange programs within the state after a local declaration of emergency. The study is based on interviews with key stakeholders in six California county and city jurisdictions.


 


Information provided by the HIV Policy Program
Publication Number: 6018
Publish Date: 2002-02-25

 

Search kff.org
Search HIV/AIDS Only
Advanced SearchHelp
Sign Up for Email Alerts
Stay informed about new publications, online tools, and news summaries on your choice of health policy topics from Kaiser.
Empty Graphic
Share
toolbox_rule
PRINTER-FRIENDLY PAGE
toolbox_rule
Email This Page
toolbox_rule
toolbox_rule
Link To Us
GET ACROBAT READER
Search Kff.org  
  Advanced Search Help
Copyright 2012 The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation Privacy Policy Help Contact