Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jun 2000 Source: Richmond Review (CN BC) Copyright: 2000 Richmond Public Library Contact: Unit 140 5671 No. 3 Road, Richmond, B.C. Fax: (604) 606-8752 Website: http://www.rpl.richmond.bc.ca/community/RichmondReview/ Author: Chris Bryan Local drug users to get needle exchange Intravenous drug users may soon be able to obtain clean needles at Richmond Hospital through an exchange provided by health services. The exchange, proposed to open next month, will provide safe disposal of needles and will be accompanied by a program to train city workers, custodians and the general public to safely discard of needles. In response to the crisis in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, intravenous drug use in the Vancouver-Richmond area was declared an emergency situation by the health board in the fall of 1997. Since that time, an exchange was set up in the Downtown Eastside, followed by 11 others in the Vancouver area. This is the first exchange in Richmond. Up until now, Richmond-area IV drug users had to travel to one of Vancouver's 12 needle exchanges to get clean needles. "What we're doing is serving the people that are already there," said Dr. John Blatherwick, the health board's chief public health officer. The service is intended to reduce the spread of blood-borne diseases like HIV, AIDS and Hepatitis throughout the Lower Mainland. The exchange will run on a one-to-one basis, meaning people will have to bring dirty needles before they can get clean ones. Participants will also receive containers to safely transport the needles, and condoms and lubricant. Along with the exchange, health services will also offer other resources such as disease testing, medical care, counselling, educational materials and referrals to local treatment centres. Brian Wardley, secretary of the Heart of Richmond AIDS Society, applauds the new needle exchange. "I know quite a few people who have HIV and AIDS because they used dirty needles, and I've seen the problems that created in their lives," he said. "So anything that can help prevent that is a good thing." Dr. Anne Vogel, Richmond's medical health officer, said the new exchange is highly unlikely to become a magnet for drug users from outside Richmond. "Richmond is a big community itself. Even getting people from Richmond to come to the hospital is not easy. Somebody would have to be pretty determined to come from somewhere else." Local drug users fall into a very different profile from those seen in places like the Downtown Eastside, she said. While they are not strictly recreational in their drug use, they are usually well-integrated into the community. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek