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International News For Lucky Few, "Recycled" HIV Drugs Keep Hope AliveApril 16, 2003 Some HIV-positive individuals in the United States and Canada have partnered with a Manhattan-based nonprofit that sorts, ships and distributes "recycled" medicine to HIV-positive people in developing countries. "People for whatever reason -- they die, they change their regimen, they never took the medicine -- they give it to us," explained Venezuelan-born Jesus Aguais, founder of Aid for AIDS. In addition, some patients donate the drugs they do not take during physician-sanctioned drug "holidays." Aguais started the agency in 1996 with only three patients: Today, it has 520 patients. After the donor's name is removed from the label on the bottle, donated medicines are carefully inventoried and sorted. Every foreign patient who applies for assistance undergoes a medical assessment, because the program's small store of medicines is best spent on those who closely adhere to the strict treatment schedules HIV drug therapies require. Working via fax and e-mail with doctors in the client's home country, Program Director Dr. Jaime Valencia reviews application forms that outline prospective clients' proof of HIV status, current medical history, and CD4 immune-cell blood counts. "We have complete control over where these medicines go," Aguais said. Because there are currently no U.S. laws allowing or prohibiting the export of donated medicines, he said it is important from a legal standpoint "to know who the patients are." He said abuse of the program (such as reselling donated medicines) is almost nonexistent, due to close bonds that have formed over time between the New York office and trusted doctors in the Americas and Africa. Reuters Health 04.14.03; E.J. Mundell ![]() U.S. HIV Patients, Not-for-Profit Groups Donate Unused Antiretroviral Drugs to Patients in Developing Countries This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. Visit the CDC's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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