Pubdate: Fri, 23 Jun 2000 Source: Worcester Telegram & Gazette (MA) Copyright: 2000 Worcester Telegram & Gazette Contact: http://www.telegram.com/index.html Author: Richard Nangle, Telegram & Gazette Staff CHANGE ON NEEDLE EXCHANGE IS SLOW Report disregarded Although Massachusetts' dramatic shift in position on providing drug users with clean needles in exchange for used ones has opened up the possibility of local needle-exchange programs, action on the federal level remains unlikely, despite a strongly worded favorable report on such programs recently released by the U.S. surgeon general's office. The state Senate last month added an amendment to its fiscal 2001 budget that would allow the state Department of Public Health to establish local needle exchanges. The controversial proposal followed a poll commissioned by the McCormack Institute at the University of Massachusetts at Boston that found that 62 percent of Massachusetts residents favor needle exchange, and that support was across virtually all demographic groups. The amendment also followed an analysis released by Surgeon General David Satcher emphasizing that recent scientific evidence points to the effectiveness of existing needle-exchange programs in the United States and Canada. Two years ago Congress voted about 2-to-1 against funding one-for-one clean needle-exchange programs. U.S. Rep. James P. McGovern, D-Worcester, who supported the needle-exchange plan, said he is not optimistic the issue will be revived anytime soon on the federal level. "Needle exchange is a controversial issue. That's no secret to anybody," Mr. McGovern said in an interview. "It's controversial on the local level and the federal level. "It's a hard topic, much misunderstood," he added. "Politicians hate to talk about it, because they get beat up during campaigns. I did during my last campaign. But the reality is, we're confronting a very serious problem here. And there really is not a comprehensive plan in place to deal with fact so many people are addicted to drugs. "I know people in my district who want to get treatment and can't get it because there are waiting lines to get into some of these programs," McGovern said. The surgeon general's report cites a 1999 study showing that HIV can survive four weeks in a contaminated syringe. It also noted other studies showing that 10.9 percent of used needles discarded in needle collection boxes at community locations tested positive for the HIV antibody and that 27 percent of contaminated syringes returned to a new needle-exchange program were positive for HIV. "The longevity of the HIV-1 virus, combined with its prevalence in used equipment in some communities, is basic to the public health rationale for removal of used syringes from the community environment," the report states. According to Amy L. Rosenberg, senior public policy and legal specialist for the Boston-based AIDS Action Committee, supporters of needle-exchange programs are far more optimistic about their prospects in Massachusetts than their prospects nationally, however. "The feds have failed to put their money where their mouth is," she said. "In the meantime, we have to keep working on the state level to get access here." "In some ways, the states are leading the nation on this," said Jane Silver, vice president of public policy for the New York City-based American Foundation for AIDS Research. "It's kind of hard to figure out what else can be done to convince politicians to put public health before politics." The needle-exchange proposal inserted in the state Senate's budget last month received the endorsement of the Massachusetts HIV Prevention Planning Group. Established in 1994 by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the MPPG was charged with formulating a statewide HIV strategy and to make recommendations to the DPH. Its endorsement of the Senate's needle-exchange amendment comes as a legislative conference committee continues its budget debate. The Massachusetts Nurses Association and American Medical Association are among a number of health-related organizations that have signed on to the Senate initiative, according to Rosenberg. Suffolk County District Attorney Ralph Martin also has come out in support of the amendment, she said. The Senate amendment allows the state public health commissioner to identify communities in which a needle-exchange program is needed to lower infection rates. A seven-member commission of local residents then would be appointed to advise the commissioner. However some legislators have come out in opposition. They claim that despite the provision for local input, the legislation cuts local politicians out of the decision. Explaining his vote against the amendment last month, state Sen. Robert A. Bernstein, D-Worcester, said, "This essentially removes local control in the decision-making process." Four Massachusetts communities have adopted needle-exchange programs -- Boston, Cambridge, Northampton and Provincetown. Among the state's largest cities, Boston and Cambridge have the lowest percentages of AIDS cases associated with use of injection drugs. In Boston, 29 percent of AIDS cases are linked to IV drug use. That figure is lower than in communities such as Lowell (60 percent), Springfield (57 percent) and Worcester (53 percent), which do not have needle-exchange programs. In Worcester, an effort last year to combine a needle-exchange program with drug treatment was defeated by a 7-4 City Council vote. The proposal had been hailed by some national experts on the subject as one of the most comprehensive needle-exchange programs ever devised. Needle-exchange advocates say the program also would cut down on the number of people who contract hepatitis C through sharing needles. Hepatitis C cases in Massachusetts have risen in recent years. In the three years before 1998, the number of cases of hepatitis C in Worcester rose from eight to 152 to 224, according to information compiled by the city's Department of Public Health and Code Enforcement. Those numbers were in contrast to rates of other communicable diseases, which remained fairly constant or decreased during the same period. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck