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BORDER EPIDEMIOLOGY WORK GROUP

BORDER EPIDEMIOLOGY WORK GROUP Annual meetings jointly planned & convened by NIDA and the Mexican Ministry of Health.   Presentation and review of data on drug abuse patterns and trends by and across border areas with emphasis on sister cities. Development of BEWG as a surveillance system.

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BORDER EPIDEMIOLOGY WORK GROUP

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  1. BORDER EPIDEMIOLOGY WORK GROUP • Annual meetings jointly planned & convened by NIDA and the Mexican Ministry of Health.   • Presentation and review of data on drug abuse patterns and trends by and across border areas with emphasis on sister cities. • Development of BEWG as a surveillance system. • Identification of issues for future research. • Collaboration on border research issues.

  2. Drug Use and Risk of HIV/AIDS on the Mexico – U.S. Border Jane C. Maxwell, University of Texas at Austin, Patricia Cravioto, Fernando Galvan, & Mario Cortés Ramírez, General Directorate of Epidemiology, Mexican Ministry of Health

  3. Data Sources • Mexico—Epidemiological Surveillance System of Addictions. • US—SAMHSA Treatment Episode Data Set. • Texas—DSHS Client Data System & Secondary School Survey. • Maxwell, J., Cravioto, P., Galvan, F., Cortes, M., Wallisch, L., Spence, R., (2006). Drug use and risk of HIV/AIDS on the Mexico-U.S. Border: A comparison of treatment admissions in both countries. Drug and Alcohol Dependence (in press).

  4. Risk Factors for HIV on the Border: Population Movements • Risk of HIV/AIDS heightened by high rates of border crossings and migration into U.S. Immigrants becoming younger & from more urban areas. • In 2000, 12.7% of all AIDS cases in Mexico involved people who had lived in the US. • Migrants are at risk because of their transient lifestyles and exposure to US culture.

  5. Risk Factors for HIV: Changing Drug Use Patterns • Use of needles to inject antibiotics and vitamins in Mexico & sharing these needles is a risk. • Time spent in the US or unprotected sex with someone who has been in US is risk factor for HIV. • US-born Hispanics more likely to have ever injected drugs or be at risk of HIV through drug use. • Drug users are at high risk of HIV due to sharing injecting equipment, burns & sores on lips from hot crack or methamphetamine pipes, & risky sexual behaviors while intoxicated or on drugs. • Drug use patterns are related to trafficking patterns.

  6. Principal Trafficking Routes: 2004 Methamphetamine Heroin Cocaine Fuente: SISVEA-PGR

  7. Heroin • Two kinds in the US—higher quality white South American and less pure Mexican. • South American is more inhalable. • Mexican heroin is either Black Tar or brown (Tar which has been ground with a filler to produce a powder). Mexican heroin is more likely to be injected, due to lower potency.

  8. Heroin Purity: 2003 10% 40% 48% 54% 16% 61% 60% 35% 20% 19% 11% 14% 30% 57% 45% 45% 13% 45% 32% 27% 26% West Average Purity: 26% Mexican East Average Purity: 42% So. American

  9. Routes of Administration of Heroin Admissions to Treatment Programs in States on the US-Mexico Border

  10. HEROIN Arizona Heroin 6% California Heroin 19% New Mexico Heroin 10% Texas Heroin 10% Baja California Heroin 34% Sonora Heroin 13% Tamaulipas Heroin 18% Chihuahua Heroin 43% Coahuila Heroin 6% Nuevo Leon Heroin 1%

  11. Cocaine • Different routes of administration. • Injecting cocaine and heroin either together or sequentially (“Speedball”). • Risky sexual behaviors while smoking crack and trading drugs for sex in crack houses. • Danger of disease transmission through burned lips from crack pipes. • Increasing cocaine use among Hispanics. Will Hispanics be the next victims of the crack and HIV epidemic?

  12. Race-Ethnicity of Texas Cocaine Admissions: 1993 v. 2004

  13. % Texas Secondary Students Who Had Ever Used Powdered Cocaine and Crack, by Grade: 2004 L. Liu, Survey of Texas Secondary School Students, 2004. Austin, TX: 2005.

  14. Routes of Administration of Cocaine Admissions to Treatment Programs in States on the US-Mexico Border

  15. Arizona Cocaine 9% COCAINE California Cocaine 12% New Mexico Cocaine 9% Texas Cocaine 26% Baja California Cocaine 3% Sonora Cocaine 35% Tamaulipas Cocaine 35% Chihuahua Cocaine 19% Nuevo Leon Cocaine 28% Coahuila Cocaine 25%

  16. Methamphetamine Forms Methamphetamine Powder Base / Paste Methamphetamine Crystal Methamphetamine--Ice

  17. Methamphetamine • Different types and names: Ice, Speed, Tina, La Tina, Chalk, Base, Red Neck Cocaine, Crystal, Shards, etc. • Risk of HIV due to IDU and high-risk sex. Both heterosexuals ad homosexuals report sex on methamphetamine as “compulsive” and “obsessive.” • Use on the job? Truckers, migrant laborers, people working long hours in boring jobs or working multiple jobs? • Ice is purer and more potent. It is usually smoked, powder is inhaled or injected, base is injected or swallowed.

  18. > 58 35 - 58 12 - 35 < 12 No data Primary Amphetamine/Methamphetamine TEDS Admission Rates: 1992(per 100,000 aged 12 and over)

  19. > 58 35 - 58 12 - 35 < 12 No data Primary Amphetamine/Methamphetamine TEDS Admission Rates: 1997(per 100,000 aged 12 and over) < 12

  20. > 58 35 - 58 12 - 35 < 12 No data Primary Amphetamine/Methamphetamine TEDS Admission Rates: 2003(per 100,000 aged 12 and over)

  21. Routes of Administration of Methamphetamine Admissions to Treatment Programs in States on the US-Mexico Border

  22. Methamphetamine is major problem on western end of the border & Ice use is up. Need research on use while working long hard jobs—day laborers, migrant farm workers, truckers, maquiladoras? • Smoking crack is increasing on the border. Will the HIV increases seen among Blacks due to crack spread to Hispanics? • Injection risks continue: tradition of needle-sharing for antibiotics & vitamins, injecting heroin.

  23. Drug patterns on the border are more similar north to south than east to west. • Stock piling on the Mexican side leads to spillage in Mexican border towns. • “Mules” now paid in drugs rather than $$, which means drugs are more available to residents of border towns. Half in Texas border survey said easy or very easy to obtain drugs (besides marijuana). • HIV/AIDS rates on the border now are low, but signs point to increases.

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