Melbourne's needle programs face shortage crisis
Surging demand for black-market peptides is depleting Victoria's syringe supplies, threatening disease prevention efforts across the state.
1 min read
Surging demand for black-market peptides is depleting Victoria's syringe supplies, threatening disease prevention efforts across the state.
1 min read

Melbourne's needle and syringe programs are facing unprecedented demand as a new cohort of drug injectors, particularly those using black-market peptides, places strain on essential health services across Victoria, according to The Age. Some services are already experiencing needle shortages, signalling a significant shift in injection drug use patterns in the state.
The rise of injectable peptides, often purchased on illegal markets, represents a departure from traditional heroin use and reflects changing drug consumption trends in Australian cities. Unlike established injecting populations, this newer cohort is driving demand that established harm reduction services were not designed to accommodate at this scale.
For Melbourne's public health system, the implications are serious. Needle and syringe programs are critical infrastructure for preventing blood-borne disease transmission, including hepatitis C and HIV. When shortages occur, users may reuse needles or share equipment, directly undermining the disease prevention goals these programs exist to achieve. The squeeze on services highlights the need for health authorities to scale up capacity and adapt programs to meet changing patterns of drug use in the community.
Sources: theage.com.au.
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Published by The Daily Melbourne
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