
April 2005 Cover
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People who sought to purchase sterile syringes from pharmacies in Colorado, Connecticut, Kentucky, and Missouri were refused at least one-third of the time, despite laws in those and most other states permitting the sale of syringes without a prescription, a recent
study found. This could hamper HIV prevention efforts, since injection drug users who purchase sterile syringes are less likely to share needles.
In the study, research assistants-- all of whom had a prior history of drug use-- attempted 1,600 syringe purchases and were refused 35 percent of the time. In Colorado, 25 percent of purchases were refused; in Connecticut, 28 percent; in Kentucky, 41 percent; and
in Missouri, 47 percent. Rural settings had lower refusal rates than urban settings, 31 and 40 percent, respectively.
Though the four states have no specific laws prohibiting pharmacies from selling syringes, the level of permissiveness varies among them. For example, Connecticut permits prescription-free sale of syringes, while Missouri gives pharmacies the power to set their
own policies, allowing pharmacists the right to refuse syringe sales to suspected drug users or to demand a prescription.
"As a way to reduce the spread of HIV, pharmacy syringe purchase without a prescription is a promising alternative to needle exchange, but pharmacies and pharmacists often erect barriers to such purchase," said study author Wilson M. Compton, MD. "We need to
study educational strategies to enhance the willingness of pharmacies and pharmacists to engage more fully in these and other HIV prevention activities."
Editor's Note: from AIDS Weekly and Law
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