Pubdate: Fri, 23 Nov 2001 Source: Ubyssey (CN BC Edu) Contact: http://www.ubyssey.bc.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/706 Author: Ian Cummins Cited: City of Vancouver's Framework for Action http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/commsvcs/planning/dtes/VanAgree/Framework2.pdf Many other references to the plan may be found by searching the city's website at http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/ Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) A CONTROVERSIAL EXCHANGE The Needle Exchange Program In The Downtown Eastside Treats Intravenous Drug Users With Respect, Not Contempt When I went looking for the needle exchange van, I expected to find something big. A big vehicle, with big wheels perhaps, giving off big noise. I tend to assume that controversial things are big and imposing. Otherwise, why all the fuss? I had phoned before for directions. Get off the bus at Main & Hastings. Walk west on Hastings, past the Carnegie Centre, past the Regent. Walk a little past the Brandiz Hotel, and stop just before you get to Columbia. Wait there until 6:15pm. Fine. I found the Brandiz Hotel, Pub and Disco, passed it, and came across a long wall covered with graffiti, several metres from Columbia. I stood next to a series of sombre black and white faces, spray-painted onto the brick. I could see crowds of people gathered up near Carnegie and the Regent, but down where I was standing there were only a few people milling around. Was I in the right place? When a small, inconspicuous, grey minivan pulled up to the side of the curb and parked, I was unfazed. My eyes kept searching the street for the needle exchange van. It was only when the driver turned on the lights in his car, and rolled down the passenger-seat window that I started to put two and two together. A few of the men and women on the street walked over to the van and formed a polite line-up. The first man stuck his head in the window, said a few words to the driver and threw a handful of needles into a bin on the passenger seat of the car. In exchange, he received a handful of plastic-wrapped syringes. The man nodded his head in thanks and walked away. This is Vancouver's needle exchange. From 6:15pm to 6:45pm, and then again from 8pm to 9pm, the needle exchange van, owned and operated by the Downtown Eastside Youth Activities Society (DEYAS), exchanges clean needles for dirty ones, seven days a week, from this exact spot on East Hastings street. No payment is required. No questions are asked. There is only one stipulation: that patrons be intravenous drug users. DEYAS owns and operates two needle exchange vans. Besides stopping on Hastings St, the vans drive through all the major streets in the Downtown Eastside, as well as a number of streets in the downtown core and several alleyways. The vans also make stops at the Portland Hotel, a low-cost housing project on West Hastings. Between 1pm and 7:30am, at least one van will be out on the road at any given moment. During the mornings, intravenous drug users can exchanges needles at the DEYAS office at 221 Main St. Again, I had thought the needle exchange office, which DEYAS staff call the 'fixed site,' would be big and instantly recognisable. But if the building hadn't been numbered, I would never have found it. The fixed site is a tiny room directly facing Main St. with red metal bars covering the windows. Inside is a wealth of pamphlets and flyers on a variety of subjects-how to inject heroin properly, where to find a free meal, what to expect off of a hit of crack and why you never want to contract Hepatitis C. "THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS PURE HEROIN HERE" reads a message on the large dry-erase board on the right-hand side of the room. Drugs in the Downtown Eastside are renowned for their impurity and users are lucky if they can find heroin that is 50 per cent pure. I ask Thomas Wheeler, one of the staff at DEYAS, what kind of things are found in impure heroin. "Oh it can be anything," he says. "A lot of stuff we see is mixed with gasoline." Thomas stands in front of a clear plastic bin filled with used needles. While we talk, a steady stream of men and women stops by to exchange needles. "Eight please, Tom," one man asks. Thomas nods, and picks out eight plastic-wrapped syringes from a box of hundreds. "Do you want water with that?" He doesn't mean water for drinking. The fixed site and the vans give out small plastic vials of clean water to clean out rigs. Since many drugs users continue to share needles, DEYAS provides them with the means to reduce the risk of infection when re-using. In several illustrated pamphlets, DEYAS shows users how to rinse used syringes with bleach and clean water to disinfect the rig. Even if users don't re-use needles, they still expose themselves to many potential health risks by injecting. Over time, many users lose the ability to inject into the veins of their arms and resort to injecting into veins On the neck and the groin-a practice which is very dangerous because of the risk of hitting an artery or nerve. It is also very common for users to develop abscesses and other infections around the area of the injection. For these reasons, showing users how to find veins and how to inject safely is part of the job for the DEYAS staff. This is one the reasons that Judy McGuire, the manager of the needle exchange program, likes to hire ex-users. "Ninety-five per cent of our staff are ex-users. They know the issues and if they've been using in the area they'll know the people," she says. DEYAS is responsible for creating the needle exchange program in Vancouver, but it was the drug users that created the demand for the service. DEYAS's founder, John Turvey, began handing out needles as early as 1988, after his clients began asking for them. "Most users take responsibility for their addictions," Judy explains. DEYAS developed the exchange program to confront the drastic increase in HIV infection rates during the late 1980s, and consulted with the community through an advisory committee to develop the program's mandate. It was important for DEYAS to confront the popular misconception that a needle exchange program would increase the level of drug use in the community. The experiences of other communities which have adopted similar programs, DEYAS said, show that this is simply not the case. The needle exchange program has three specific goals: maximising access to clean syringes, bleach, condoms and similar products for intravenous drug users; educating users on the proper use of equipment to prevent the transmission of HIV and other infections; and recovering contaminated needles as quickly and completely as possible to prevent their re-use, while minimising the number of used syringes discarded in public places. To an outsider, there may appear to be something missing from the objectives of the program. Nowhere is there any mention of decreasing the level of drug use in the Downtown Eastside. If the community is facing such a drastic problem with drug use, shouldn't the program encourage users to think about healthier lifestyle choices? "No," says Judy, "that's not the point at all. We're here to support users in their choices." The exchange program is not meant to reduce drug use. The exchange staff aren't out to promote healthy lifestyle alternatives. The needle exchange program is a harm reduction initiative. So what is 'harm reduction?' I ask Judy this very question, and she rolls her eyes and laughs. It is as easy to define harm reduction as it is to define morals and ethics. She thinks for a while. "I suppose harm reduction consists of strategies that reduce harm to an individual that results from particularly harmful behaviour, without these strategies causing further harm for others," she says decidedly. 'Harm reduction' is a popular topic in the Downtown Eastside, and not only amongst outreach organisations. It is one of four pillars, along with Prevention, Treatment and Enforcement, of A Framework For Action, the City of Vancouver's most recent strategy for combating drug problems in Vancouver. In the over-80-page report, 'harm reduction' is defined as a "pragmatic approach that focuses on decreasing the negative consequences of drug use for communities and individuals." According to A Framework for Action, an initiative must meet five criteria in order for it be classified as a harm reduction initiative: It must not cause harm; it must respect the basic human dignity of persons who use drugs, it must maximise intervention options; it must focus on the harm caused by drug use, rather than drug use per se; and it must have appropriate outcome goals. A lot of different outreach services might or might not be thought of as reducing harm. Drug and alcohol counselling is commonly thought of as a form of harm reduction. So is methadone treatment. Some argue that safe infection sites are as well. These sites provide a clean and safe place where users can inject and be in constant contact with health care staff. Cities such as Frankfurt and Amsterdam, facing drug problems similar to the ones in Vancouver, have shown that safe injection sites reduce the number of deaths due to overdose. Some even argue that legalising drug use outright is the ultimate harm reduction initiative. Legalisation would eliminate the stigma associated with the use of crack and heroin, and would allow users to focus on using safely. Four blocks away from the needle exchange office, Dr Kevin Rowan toys with the idea of legalising narcotics as a solution to the drug problem in Vancouver. "Maybe we should install vending machines on every corner, and fill them with free heroin and crack, along with clean syringes and instructions on how to inject properly," he says. Rowan isn't serious when he suggests this, but he sees it as a way of confronting prostitution, which is the problem that bothers him the most. Rowan, a UBC graduate, is a part of the Community Health Initiative by UBC Students (CHIUS), which operates Wednesday through Saturday out of a drop-in health clinic on Cordova St. During specific hours on these days, a doctor and a handful of medical students make themselves available to anyone who needs medical care, counselling or just someone to talk to. Working with CHIUS has given Rowan insights into addiction that he says he would never have had before. "There is a lot more to addiction than the chemical component. There is a huge social component," he says. April Halliday, a second-year Medicine student at UBC, agrees. "We're all susceptible to addiction," she says. "I've met users in this clinic who are PhDs." Halliday speaks highly of her experiences at the clinic. What she enjoys most are the relationships she forms with patients, many of whom are struggling with substance abuses. Some of her patients have gone into recovery while she has known them. Most relapse, which Halliday admits is disappointing, but she points out that it takes the average drug user seven times to quit a habit. For this reason, she says that harm reduction initiatives such as the needle exchange and safe injection sites make sense. CHIUS participants do not exchange needles themselves, but by forming relationships with patients and providing referrals, they are actively reducing the potential for users to meet harm, whether self-inflicted or inflicted by others. The needle exchange program is a small part of a far larger project: allowing drug users to make choices for themselves, and helping them to act safely regardless of what choices they make. It's not about big vans, or big offices or even big ideals. It's about respect. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake