Pubdate: Fri, 25 Feb 2000 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 2000 Contact: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Author: Sian Powell ON THE RIGHT TRACK? Safe Injecting Rooms For Drug Users Are Successful In Europe. Sian Powell Looks At How The Idea Could Work Here. EARLY in the frosty winter morning a crowd begins to gather outside Niddestr 49, an anonymous building in downtown Frankfurt. Stamping their feet on the freezing pavement and exhaling white clouds of warm air, they're waiting to do something that is as yet unknown in Australia: to walk in, sign on with a nickname or initials, receive a new needle and syringe and an alcohol swab, and await their turn to shoot up in peaceful and hygienic surroundings. When Jo Kimber visited six government-run safe injecting rooms in Germany late last year, she was impressed by how friendly relations were between the staff and the drug users, and how smoothly everything functioned. "The feeling in most places was positive rather than negative," says the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre researcher. "They are more than just places to take drugs -- they provide all sorts of services and support, such as a cafe with cost-price food and drinks, needle and syringe exchanges, counselling, primary medical care, washing machines and dryers, showers, and clothing pools." Many Australians would recoil at some of the mechanics of injecting centres: the screened-off corner in the injecting room itself which allows women particularly, to inject in the groin; the mirrors hung in strategic places to assist those who want to inject into their necks; the sheer number of drug users who need medical care for abscesses and collapsed veins. But Germans generally have a far more pragmatic view, and have long recognised the twin benefits of getting addicts off the streets and keeping them as healthy as possible. Now, with today's Uniting Church announcement that a site has been chosen for the 18-month injecting centre trial approved by the NSW parliament, it looks as though Australia will soon take its place alongside the three nations that have sanctioned injecting rooms: Switzerland, Germany and The Netherlands. Spain, too, late last year announced it would open an official injeeting room in the near future, and the idea has been mooted in Austria. In 1998, 737 Australians died of heroin overdoses -- injecting room advocates are hoping for a reduction in those numbers; even though only one injecting room will be open in Sydney, and for only seven hours a day. Certainly, the Australian public seems doubtful about the benefits of safe injecting rooms: the 1998 Drug Household Survey of more than 10,000 people found only one in three Australians supported the idea. A more finely focused survey of 300 residents in Kings Cross in 1997 and 1998 found about seven in 10 were in favour (with a slight increase in 1998). The first injecting rooms in Germany, which opened in 1994, also met with some opposition, but the significant decrease in fatal overdoses and the noticeable decline of the "open" drug scene on the streets - addicts publicly injecting heroin - swung public opinion around. There are now 13 official injecting centres, or Gesundheltrsraume (health rooms), in Germany, and more are in the pipeline. All are funded, at least in part, by local authorities and run by non-government organisations in consultation with the community and the police, and none has ever had a fatal overdose on the premises. Statistics complied by the George Soros-funded Lindesmith Centre in the US paint a clear picture of the German success. Fatal overdoses in Frankfurt declined from 147 in 1991 to 26 in 1997. Switzerland introduced injecting rooms when it became clear in the 1980s that the drug-using population was being ravaged by HIV. Established in the German-speaking cities of Zurich, Bern and Basel, the injecting rooms have improved the health of drug users, according to a paper by Wouter de Jong and Urban Weber published in the International Drug Journal last year, These experts concluded that the Swiss safe injecting rooms were good for the health of drug users, reduced the presence of syringes on the streets and decreased the prevalence of unsafe sex. Much the same benefits occurred in Germany, they found, with a reduction in fatal overdoses. It is the irrefutable benefits illustrated by statistics such as these that have persuaded the religious establishment to take part in the safe injecting room projects both in Victoria and NSW. When the Vatican forced the Sisters of Charity to pull out of running the Sydney injecting room last year, the Uniting Church stepped into the breach. The Uniting Church's Rev Harry Herbert said details of exactly how the premises in Kings Cross would be laid out and the services that would be offered had yet to be finalised. Herbert recently visited Melbourne, where the Wesley Mission has an inner-city safe injecting facility just about ready to go. The Mission is waiting for the go-ahead from the Bracks Government, which in turn has asked an expert committee to look at ways of setting up the safe injecting rooms project. Once the nuts and bolts are sorted out it seems likely the Government will ask the Wesley Mission to take on one of the five proposed injecting centres. Wesley Mission Victoria managing director Judy Leitch says the church has been working on the Melbourne project for 12 months now, and is committed to alleviating the plight of drug users: "Last year there were 350 fatal overdoses in Victoria," she says. "It's escalating - every year there's more." The Wesley Mission centre will have enough space for six addicts at once to be injecting in the injecting room; Herbert thinks places for 10 would be more suitable in Kings Cross. Niedestr 49, by way of comparison, has places for 12, and accommodates more than 400 visits a day. Despite the Wesley Mlssion's head start, Australia's first injecting centre might open in Canberra. In the ACT, the injecting centre legislation has been passed and a committee recently appointed to investigate ways and means. Many in Government circles expect an injecting centre to be operational in the nation's capital by mid year. For the Sydney injecting centre, Herbert envisaged a workstation type of arrangement, with hygienic stainless steel surfaces and hard flooring. "The injecting room would be like an operating theatre, with easy clean surfaces and no edges," he says. A cafe would probably be part of the centre, and rules would be developed. Professor Ian Webster, chair of the Alcohol and Other Drugs Council of Australia, says agencies have to provide a service drug users found acceptable. "You might build the most pristine place, but unless it's something they accept, they won't use it." The important thing is to keep the users alive: many drug users grow out of the habit, he says. The paradigm has remained much the same for years: one-third of heroin users die, one-third grow out of it, and one-third remain dependent on one substance or another. It is hoped the introduction of an injection room will change those fractions, keeping, addicts alive by preventing fatal overdoses. Most heroin overdose deaths in NSW over a five-year-period occurred in Sydney, and 20 per cent of all deaths occurred in or near Kings Gross, with 15 per cent, in or near Cabramatta. Well over half of the Cabramatta and Kings Cross overdose deaths were in a public place. The provision of a safe injecting room, then, should drag the numbers of fatal overdoses down, at least in Kings Cross. A SURVEY by the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre of 200 injecting drug users found that addicts who frequently injected in public places were more likely to have overdosed in the preceding six months. Australian drug users are likely to use safe injecting rooms providing their anonymity can be guaranteed and the level of intervention remains low. Another recent survey, conducted by Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre in Victoria, found that nine in 10 injecting drug users knew about safe injecting rooms, knew they would be safe and secure, knew there would be no police present, and that medical staff would be on hand. Almost eight in 10 said they would be willing to use a safe injecting room. The addicts are in favour, much of the medical establishment is in favour, the Uniting Church is willing to take on the project: all that is now required is an unhindered trial. Australia led the world in the provision of needle and syringe exchanges, and as a result the incidence of HIV among injecting drug users here is remarkably low in comparison with the rest of the world. Webster believes that there is a critical mass of researchers doctors and activists involved in the drugs problem in Australia, and as long as the project proceeds as planned. It is possible that Australia could again lead the world -- at least the English-speaking world -- in the development of pragmatic and humane drugs policies, which includes the provision of injecting rooms. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake