 In 2009 the legal highs came and the injecting and the use patterns changed totally because the heroin user went for the legal highs when they experienced heroin user would shoot up to 4, 5, 6 times a day. When they went for legal highs they would shoot 10, 15, 20 times a day. Right now out of 7 or 8 pain testers, 4 or 5 or even 6 are HIV positive to the rapid testers. From a maximum of 2 million syringes in 2009, in 2010 we dropped to less than 1 million. Something happened and there was not at all enough injecting materials on the market. Is there any change in the financial situation after the HIV epidemic? No, we don't have any families from the center. By the end of June some home reduction problems might stop. About 200 or 300 people in substitution treatment will be left out. A lot of vein injectors will no longer have access to clean syringes and this would be just factors for increasing the epidemic. We ask the international community to help us. We just know what the solutions are but we're not able to take the right measures to save people's lives. This is not only a national problem, this is a European problem too.