Pubdate: Sat, 27 Oct 2001 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: The Hamilton Spectator 2001 Contact: http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Lee Prokaska, Municipal Affairs Reporter NEEDLE PLAN RAISES QUESTIONS The region's fledgling needle exchange program distributed 3,641 new needles to drug users in four months of operation. The program, called Exchange Works, also handed out a range of safer injection equipment including cotton filters, sterile water, tourniquets and alcohol swabs, as well as 890 condoms and 226 packages of lubricant to promote safer sex practices among intravenous drug users. And 20 people who made contact with a needle exchange outreach worker were referred to other agencies for counselling. "Initially, you need to build trust before people can identify that they are looking at different issues in their lives," said Denise Mousseau, a community outreach worker with the city of Hamilton. "It takes slow, gentle progress." The continuation of a needle exchange program has been approved by regional council, although it must still get through the budget process intact. The $40,000 pilot program, which got up and running last May, is expected to cost about $80,000 annually. In its first four months of operation, the program had contact with 78 people, with 30 repeat contacts. Seventy-two of the contacts involved an exchange of needles or injection equipment. A staff report to the region indicates the average age of clients was 26 and the primary drugs of choice were steroids, heroin, cocaine and prescription opiates. Twenty of the contacts also involved counselling in areas such as safer injection practices, safer sex, safer steroid injection, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis and prevention and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases. Community-based organizations that support the needle exchange program say the people it reaches are a difficult group to serve. "Because it's a hidden population, we can't be assured of their safety," said Jennifer Spears, program manager with Halton's ADAPT (Alcohol and Drug Assessment, Prevention and Treatment). "It is a difficult population to access and this program provides harm-reduction strategies because we can educate them about not sharing needles and using condoms. But it's also a bridge to treatment for this group." ADAPT is among the organizations that make up the needle exchange advisory committee, which was created more than a year ago to provide advice and evaluate the program. All the Exchange Works contacts so far have been through a mobile outreach service, not through any fixed sites. The contacts are spread -- somewhat unevenly -- throughout the region, with three in Georgetown, eight in Acton, 14 in Oakville, 38 in Milton and 45 in Burlington. The apparently high number of contacts in Milton caused concern for Milton Councillor Richard Malboeuf, who questioned whether the numbers indicate a drug problem in his town. But Dr. Bob Nosal, the region's medical officer of health, says Milton is no worse than any other community. "So much of it depends on contacts, supports that exist, networking within the various populations," Nosal told a recent meeting of the region's health and social services committee. "There is no evidence that there is a drug problem in Milton that is higher than any other community in Halton." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens