Imperial Valley Press

Medication lockers help Miami’s homeless living with HIV

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MIAMI (AP) — Ivette Naida says keeping tabs on her HIV medication can be a daunting task.

Naida lives underneath a Miami highway overpass with several other homeless men and women. She has no safe place to keep her belongings.

HIV-positive people who live on the streets are less likely to be successful in suppressin­g the virus with medication, according to a 2017 National Institute of Health study and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. One reason, health experts say, is that they usually carry all their belongings with them every day, and their medicine, valued at hundreds of dollars per prescripti­on bottle, is often lost or stolen as they navigate life on the streets.

“The main thing that you worry about out here is people stealing your stuff,” says Nadia, 33, who was diagnosed with the virus more than a decade ago; she says she contracted it as the result of using illegal injected drugs.

A University of Miami-sponsored program called the IDEA Exchange has begun providing infected homeless people with medication lockers: secure locations where participan­ts’ prescripti­ons are stored. They can pick up their medicine from the lockers at a converted shipping container office in Miami, or have social workers deliver a few days’ worth of the medicine to them. Smaller quantities are easier to safeguard. Prescripti­ons are paid for by Medicaid or a federal drug assistance program for low-income people living with HIV.

Storing medication for the homeless has long been encouraged by public health experts: Washington, D.C., New York, Boston and other cities offer similar services.

The Miami initiative began in 2018 after an HIV outbreak among the city’s homeless, says Dr. Hansel Tookes, a University of Miami

physician who leads the program. An unpreceden­ted number of homeless people were entering the health system, and a key problem for them was losing track of their possession­s, Tookes says. Medication lockers help “avoid hiccups” as health profession­als attempt to stabilize the situation, he says.

Elisha Ekowo, a social worker who leads the program’s outreach team, says preventing the spread of HIV is a top priority. She notes that if those infected are able to suppress it, there is less of a chance they’ll give it to someone else.

The program claims a 100% viral suppressio­n rate among its 13 partici

 ?? AP PHOTO/LYNNE SLADKY ?? In this July 24 photo, Ivette Naida (center) talks with social worker Elisha Ekowo, left, and Chevel Collington, right, both of the IDEA Exchange, in Miami.
AP PHOTO/LYNNE SLADKY In this July 24 photo, Ivette Naida (center) talks with social worker Elisha Ekowo, left, and Chevel Collington, right, both of the IDEA Exchange, in Miami.

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