Pubdate: Tue, 08 May 2001
Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)
Section: Health and Science
Copyright: 2001 PG Publishing
Contact:  http://www.post-gazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/341
Author: Deborah Weisberg
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

COUNTY BEGINS HEARINGS ON LEGAL NEEDLE EXCHANGE

With the number of HIV cases doubling in Allegheny County among intravenous 
drug users during the past year, the Health Department for the first time 
is considering creating a legal needle exchange program.

A series of public hearings begin on Saturday to collect community input on 
a controversial practice that has been found to stem the spread of HIV 
infection in other cities.

The incidence of HIV within the drug-shooting culture now rivals that of 
gay men in the Pittsburgh area, said Guillermo Cole, spokesman for the 
Allegheny County Health Deparment. An equally pressing concern is the 
number of new hepatitis C cases coming from shared needles. Hepatitis C, a 
blood-borne pathogen that can lead to liver disease or liver failure, may 
affect as many as 79 percent of IV drug users nationwide, according to the 
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"Things are different than they were a year ago," Cole said. "The numbers 
are very telling. They're prompting concerns."

On June 1, the numbers will start to tell more, as the county implements an 
HIV reporting system 0that will track results of all tests, no matter where 
they are done.

While confidentiality or anonymity will be maintained at the option of 
those being tested, every incidence of HIV -- the virus that causes 
acquired immune deficiency syndrome -- will be reported to the county, 
which now gets its data only from publicly funded facilities such as the 
health department clinics and the county jail.

The 8,700 tests the county processed last year revealed 59 cases of HIV, 
including 21 among gay males and 18 among heterosexual IV drug users. The 
year before, 8,738 tests found 48 cases of HIV, eight of whom were IV drug 
users and 20 gay males.

The new reporting system will give the county more data, while a needle 
exchange program would provide better access to an IV drug-use population 
believed to number 13,000 to 20,000.

"A key component of any needle exchange program would be HIV testing and 
drug treatment, especially getting people off drugs," said Cole. "But we're 
not at the point where we've structured a program. We're just beginning the 
information gathering stage."

A mostly volunteer group called Prevention Point Pittsburgh Inc. has been 
operating an underground needle exchange program for six years. Without 
much resistance from police and public officials, it delivers 310,000 
syringes a year to heroin and cocaine users in areas such as the Hill 
District and McKeesport. It also dispenses condoms.

Dr. Bruce Dixon, health department director, said the county would choose a 
group to develop a pilot project and that the county would regulate, but 
not fund, its work.

He refused to speculate about such a role for Prevention Point Pittsburgh, 
though co-founder Stuart Fisk, a registered nurse and HIV/AIDS specialist, 
said his organization would "demand" that the county enlist its help in 
establishing a needle exchange program.

"We have the experience and the contacts," he said. "But our preference 
would be to continue to operate on our own."

Fisk and Dixon agree that bringing needle exchange out of the shadows would 
improve access to new funding sources, and provide the sort of health 
screenings and treatment that people living on the fringe fail to receive. 
And both say that needle exchange works.

A CDC study released last June showed that in 1997 there were 113 needle 
exchange programs operating in more than 30 states, the District of 
Columbia and in Puerto Rico. These programs were reducing the spread of HIV 
by about 30 percent and were reducing risk behavior by as much as 80 percent.

Prevention Point Pittsburgh and other HIV/AIDS-related organizations plan 
to testify at the health department hearings, and submit written 
endorsements from the people they serve, Fisk said.

Fisk and others have lobbied the county for years to legitimize Prevention 
Point Pittsburgh Inc., which operates on about $60,000 a year in private 
donations. It hired its first paid employee in September.

Next month, the group will begin a $5,000 research project, underwritten by 
the Beth Israel Institute for Chemical Dependency in New York, to determine 
how needle exchange has altered injecting behavior among participants. The 
funding would also allow the organization to offer HIV and hepatitis C 
testing for those who agree to it, Fisk said.

Although county Chief Executive Jim Roddey said last summer that he 
supports needle exchange and would ask the state legislature to amend laws 
on possession of syringes, he has not taken action. He says he'll wait for 
the findings of the health department hearings. In Pennsylvania, possessing 
a non-prescribed syringe is a misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail.

Mayor Tom Murphy believes needle exchange is good public policy as part of 
an overall drug treatment program, said his spokesman Doug Root. "He'd like 
to figure out a way to make the law more pliable when it comes to putting 
policy into effect."

Legalizing needle exchange here does not require state action --just a 
declaration of a health emergency by Dixon, something Philadelphia did 
years ago.

"Involving the legislature would turn this into a long-term process," said 
Dixon. "And rural communities don't have the HIV incidence we do. This is 
an issue for the counties."

Dixon also predicted that it will probably take until November for the 
nine-member county board of health to review the results of the hearings 
and issue a decision about needle exchange. "We want information. And to 
see the tenor of the community."

"You just wonder how there could be any kind of opposition," said Bob 
Feikema, executive director of the Pittsburgh AIDS Task Force. "It's almost 
a no-brainer, except that it raises emotional issues and not fact-based 
issues. The concerns are that syringe exchange will increase drug abuse and 
result in dirty needles laying around, but research shows the opposite is 
true."

"It's an idea whose time has more than come," said Kenneth Walker, a 
community outreach advocate for the Mental Health Association of Allegheny 
County, a drug treatment referral and advocacy group.

"When the idea was first brought up seven, eight years ago, people said, 
'Oh, no. Not here.' But, if you've ever been to 'shooting galleries,' you 
see [shared] needles sitting in glasses of water or bleach. They're not 
foolproof. They spread AIDS. Needle exchange is the right thing to do."