Pubdate: Sat, 29 Jan 2000 Source: Herald Sun (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 2000 Contact: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/ Author: Jason Frenkel BEACH JAB THREAT GOES UP IN SMOKE THE bulb of blood forming on the tip of his finger was all the evidence Dick Gross needed to show that Elwood beach should have a needle incinerator. The Port Phillip Mayor was unveiling the latest weapon in the fight to rid St Kilda's beaches of used syringes when he pricked his finger -- exactly the type of injury the presence of the incinerator is designed to prevent. The hypodermic needle incinerator, the first of its kind to be used in Victoria, was donated to the Elwood Life Saving Club yesterday by SHG Medical Australia, a NSW medical supply firm. Low-voltage electrical currents burn the needle at l700 deg., reducing it to ashes and ultimately making the process of syringe disposal safer. The heat blast also kills any bacteria or viruses still living in the needle, eliminating the risk of contracting HIV or hepatitis C from a discarded syringe. The incinerator is child-proof, and takes just a couple of seconds to do its job. Cr Gross said Elwood Life Saving Club would try the incinerator before he would consider installing them in other beaches in the area. "It's a question of cost. It has to be evaluated to see whether it goes in absolutely every toilet block in our city,94 he said. The incinerator is considered a safer, cheaper alternative to the sharps bins now used by Port Philip Council. At least five sharps bins are required to dispose of 500 needles, the equivalent of just one replaceable cartridge in the new incinerator. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson