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Communities need to be equal partners in determining whether research is acceptable
  1. Bridget G Haire1,
  2. John M Kaldor2
  1. 1Kirby Institute, University of NSW Australia, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
  2. 2Kirby Institute for Infection in Society, University of NSW Australia, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
  1. Correspondence to Dr Bridget G Haire, Kirby Institute, University of NSW Australia, level 6, Wallace Wurth Building, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; b.haire{at}unsw.edu.au

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In many countries around the world, people who inject drugs remain at high risk of HIV acquisition not because effective forms of prevention are unknown, nor because they find effective prevention undesirable, but because those in charge, mainly politicians but also bureaucrats, find evidence-based practice politically unacceptable. The evidence for preventive efficacy of harm reduction strategies, most prominently needle and syringe programmes (sometimes called ‘needle exchange programmes’) but also treatment programmes such as opiate substitution, is irrefutable.1 However, political responses to drug use issues are varied and complex, so the will to implement appropriate harm reduction programmes in the interests of public health remains lacking in too many jurisdictions. As a consequence, the discussion of how best, in the context of research, to reduce HIV incidence in populations of people who inject drugs but are not offered comprehensive access to known prevention strategies is—tragically—an important one.

Dawson et al2 focus on access to sterile injecting equipment and recognise that this should remain the ‘default’ standard of prevention for HIV prevention trials involving people for whom injecting drug use is the primary risk factor for HIV acquisition. ‘Standard of prevention’ means the background or minimal HIV risk reduction interventions offered to all participants in a trial, regardless of what other investigational interventions they are assigned to receive. The standard of prevention concept is grounded in the ethical principle of beneficence—that researchers and sponsors are obliged to maximise benefits and minimise risks to participants in research studies.3 …

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Footnotes

  • Contributors BGH drafted the article. JMK provided intellectual input into refining the conceptual basis and language in the article. Both approved the final copy.

  • Funding National Health and Medical Research Council (grant number RG150825).

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.

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