Pubdate: Sat, 29 Apr 2000 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The Toronto Star Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ Page: A11 Author: Dennis Bueckert, Canadian Press AIDS PAMPHLET UNDER ATTACK Health Canada Brochure Appears To Push Drug Use OTTAWA - Health Canada has sparked sharp debate with a pamphlet that appears to endorse injection drug use. "Just because we've made the choice that we don't want AIDS doesn't mean the party's over," says the AIDS-prevention pamphlet, being distributed at health clinics, schools and libraries. "We can still fool around with sex and have a great time. Still shoot up if that's what we're into." The pamphlet, carrying the logos of Health Canada and the Canadian AIDS Society, then provides detailed instructions for having safe sex and cleaning needles. Andrew Papadopoulos, executive director of the Association of Local Public Health Agencies, said the wording startled him because "At no time would public health even begin to advocate injection drug use. "I don't know who their target audience is with this pamphlet but it certainly seems to be youth, and it's not a behaviour you would want to semi-encourage." Papadopoulos notes positive messages have been shown to work better than negative messages, but the federal pamphlet goes too far. Many diseases are spread by sharing needles, he said, but "injection drug use itself is as dangerous as any of the communicable diseases you could obtain from this activity. The shooting-up line is over the top." Dr. Keith Martin, a Canadian Alliance MP and leadership candidate, said of the wording, "It should be removed. To imply it's okay to shoot up is saying there are no boundaries. For the government to say there are no boundaries is immoral." A Health Canada spokesperson said the pamphlet does not condone such behaviour. "It's simply acknowledging it does occur," said Michael Jacino, marketing adviser to the Canadian Strategy on HIV-AIDS at Health Canada. The tone is of youth talking to youth and it was designed with "peer educators at the community level" in mind. Richard Garlick of the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse defended the approach. "It really hits people pretty forcefully. The here and now is that people are becoming infected every day because they don't know how to inject safely." About 6,500 copies of the pamphlet have been distributed. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea