Pubdate: Fri, 18 Aug 2000
Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)
Section: Health and Science
Copyright: 2000 PG Publishing
Contact:  http://www.post-gazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/341
Author: Deborah Weisberg
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

PREVENTION POINT PITTSBURGH GOES UNDERGROUND TO GET CLEAN NEEDLES TO ADDICTS

In the culture of despair, death often pivots on the point of a syringe. It 
is not always the $50 bag of heroin that kills, as much as the 7-cent 
needle that's been passed from one addict to another.

For this reason, Caroline Acker, a Carnegie Mellon University assistant 
professor of history, and Stuart Fisk, a registered nurse and HIV 
specialist, are on the front lines of an illegal needle exchange program 
that is taking thousands of sterile syringes a week directly to drug 
addicts in Allegheny County.

The group, Prevention Point Pittsburgh, made headlines two years ago when 
it set up card tables on Hill District sidewalks to pass out clean syringes 
and other materials to addicts. Complaints by residents who worried that 
the program attracted pushers and users and increased crime to their 
neighborhood spurred police to shut down the public exchange.

But the program continues underground -- at a rate of roughly 310,000 
syringe packets distributed a year -- bolstered by a cadre of dedicated 
volunteers and $30,000 in annual grants and donations. Contributions come 
from individuals and organizations such as the Three Rivers Community Fund, 
the Maurice Falk Medical Fund and the Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force.

Two weeks ago, the Drug Policy Foundation, a Washington-based think tank, 
provided a $25,000 grant, which will enable the group to hire a part-time 
staff person who will help write grants and administer the program.

And the group recently received a pledge from Beth Israel Hospital's 
Chemical Dependency Institute in New York City to fund a study of the 
effectiveness of its exchange effort.

"We're public heath workers," says Acker. "We're not about drug addiction, 
we're about stemming the spread of infectious disease."

Fisk, a nurse for 10 years agrees.

"We need to look at the global picture, of promoting the health of 
individuals and the health of communities."

---

When Prevention Point Pittsburgh started five years ago, the spread of HIV 
infection among the estimated 13,000 to 20,000 intravenous drug addicts in 
Allegheny County dominated its concerns.

But the alarming increase recently of hepatitis C, a blood-borne pathogen 
that lives longer on stray surfaces, has prompted the group to intensify 
its efforts.

Most new hepatitis C cases come from sharing needles, since the virus is 
more difficult to transmit sexually than the one that causes acquired 
immune deficiency syndrome, Fisk says.

At least 60 percent of IV drug addicts, if not more, are believed to have 
hepatitis C, he says. "Most of them will develop a chronic, lifelong 
infection, and ultimately get liver cancer or liver failure, and die."

The virus infects more than 2.7 million Americans. This year, in fact, more 
people are expected to die from hepatitis C than from AIDS.

Among illegal drug users, there also is the risk of abscesses developing at 
injection sites and bacteria traveling to the lining and the valves of the 
heart.

Some addicts are so outside the mainstream, they never go to hospitals, 
Fisk says, while others are treated "like dirt and don't return. We'd like 
to integrate these people into the health care system."

----

Each week, Prevention Point Pittsburgh volunteers deliver about 6,000 
"outfits" or "works" to shooting gallery managers and others in McKeesport 
and the Hill District. The outfits include syringes, bottle caps in which 
heroin powder is "cooked," cotton filters through which the solution is 
drawn into needles, alcohol prep pads, condoms and empty biohazard 
containers. The managers and others exchange these containers with those 
filled with used needles, which the organization arranges to have 
destroyed. The volunteers also take supply orders for the next week.

A typical heroin addict uses four to six needles a day, since the drug 
produces a five-hour high. Cocaine users binge and may go through dozens of 
needles a day.

Addicts will sometimes do a "speedball" -- injecting cocaine to give their 
heroin shot a boost.

Prevention Point Pittsburgh purchases the outfits -- which cost about $1 
apiece -- from the North American Syringe Exchange Network, a Tacoma, 
Wash., buyers' club founded by a former user turned drug counselor. Acker 
and other volunteers pay out of their own pockets for incidentals, such as 
postage, and transport supplies in their cars.

The group is hoping to raise enough money to purchase a van to help in its 
distribution.

----

A 30-year drug user who goes by his street name, Mookie, was the group's 
first customer in 1995. Now 52, Mookie, a manager of a Hill District 
shooting gallery, continues to place his weekly orders.

"I need 800 more 'pogos,'" Mookie told Acker on a recent Sunday, referring 
to the insulin syringe most addicts prefer because of its bigger barrel and 
finer point. These will be added to his standing weekly order of 1,600 
"pogos," 700 "blues," so-called for their blue tip, which is long and fine 
enough to hit deeper veins in the neck, groin and chest, once surface veins 
are spent, and 100 smaller needles for newer injectors and those with good 
blood vessels.

Once the sterile needles are distributed, some may show up on the black 
market, where they are sold for as much as $5 a piece. The fact that some 
people are making a profit off of the free, clean needles doesn't bother 
Acker and Fisk so much, because the ultimate goal is to get the clean 
needles to those who really need them, they say.

Since the operation was forced underground, Acker and Fisk say police are 
aware of its activities, but have not intervened.

"It's the church ladies I'm afraid of," Acker says. When the group held the 
more open exchanges on the sidewalks on Sundays, "about the time church let 
out, a car would pull up and a woman would say, 'I know you and I'm going 
to get you out of here.' She made one call to the police and that did it."

Prevention Point Pittsburgh now has a phone number addicts can call to 
arrange needle drop-offs.

----

In 1988, Congress -- fearful that needle exchanges could promote drug use 
-- banned use of federal money for such programs unless they could be shown 
to reduce the spread of HIV and not promote illegal drug use.

Still, there are about 150 needle exchange programs nationwide, many 
supplied by the Tacoma operation. Some operate legally, some are illegal 
but tolerated, and many operate underground.

Pennsylvania sanctions no needle exchange programs and makes nonprescribed 
syringe possession a misdemeanor, technically punishable by a year in jail.

"The most effective response to illegal drug use is drug treatment," says 
Gary Gurian, deputy secretary for public health programs with the 
Pennsylvania Department of Health. "The problem with needle exchange is 
that it exchanges one dependency with another. It's really not solving the 
problem."

Philadelphia, however, operates a clean needle exchange program that has 
been funded through the city's Health Department. Throughout the week, 
clean syringes are distributed to about 5,000 drug addicts at designated 
sites throughout the city.

Acker says Prevention Point Pittsburgh would like to see Pennsylvania law 
changed "so that addicts could buy syringes, either over the counter, or 
with a prescription from their doctor, which would probably make it a 
little more palatable."

Now, only diabetics and others who need to inject legal prescription drugs 
can obtain syringes from pharmacies.

Acker argues that state laws regarding syringe sales do not apply to needle 
exchanges since the intent of these programs is to prevent the spread of 
disease, and that Allegheny County has the authority -- and a public health 
responsibility -- to let Prevention Point Pittsburgh openly do its work.

Jim Roddey, Allegheny County's new manager, says he supports needle 
exchange, but sees it as a matter for the state Legislature.

"Everyone knows it's going on, so it should either be legalized or 
enforced, and I think it should be legalized," he says. "...The important 
issue is to stop the spread of infection, and denying needles is not the 
way to get rid of drugs. The way to do that is to be tougher on the drug 
pushers.

"I've just made a note to myself to talk to the [state] delegates in 
September," he says.

----

Prevention Point Pittsburgh is striving for consensus among all government 
agencies. "Then we could meet a greater need, which would include having a 
drop-in site with a nurse, where people could come for [disease] testing 
and treatment," Acker says.

Program volunteers also are eager to participate in the Beth Israel study.

"The study will tell us what our work means to the people we serve," Acker 
says. "It could also allow us to test for HIV and hepatitis C to determine 
how many of the people we reach are HIV positive and whether there's any 
connection with those numbers and what we do.

"Our philosophy is, you build relationships of trust with people. Needle 
exchange gives us entree [into the drug world], so we can begin to address 
other issues, like intolerance toward blacks and gays, more equal access to 
health care and treatment, housing, and prostitution.

"There are public health care agencies that would like to work with us," 
she says, "but their hands are tied, because we're illegal."