Type | Report |
Title | Glue Sniffing and Other Risky Practices Among Street Children in Urban Bangladesh |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
URL | https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/12674/704310ESW0P11100report0final0Nov027.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | Bangladesh has been successful in maintaining a low prevalence of HIV to date. The challenge is to sustain the low prevalence particularly in the face of a concentrated epidemic among injecting drug users (IDU) in Dhaka and widespread sex work across the country. Added to these problems is the fact that most drug users (both injecting and non-injecting) in Bangladesh are young people, while rapid urbanization and migration to the major cities intensify the situation. Data from across the region has shown that the pathway to injecting drug use starts with early initiation into drugs. In the developed world, inhalation of solvents for recreational purposes has been a long standing problem. In South Asia, however, this is an emerging issue. Though the exact number of children addicted to glue sniffing in Asia is not known, it has been identified as a common problem among street children in Thailand, Indonesia, Cambodia, Malaysia, Pakistan, India and Philippines. The prevalence and public health effects of solvent abuse are often underestimated and there is inadequate local knowledge of this phenomenon and its relationship to other risky practices. |
» | Bangladesh - Urban Health Survey 2006 |