Pubdate: Mon, 26 Mar 2001 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2001 The Toronto Star Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ USE OF HAMILTON NEEDLE EXCHANGE UP FOURFOLD Officials Claim Program Saves Money By Keeping HIV, Hep C Rates Down HAMILTON - Hamilton drug addicts scooped up 52,000 free needles last year, a nearly fourfold jump from 1997 when a surge of overdose deaths sparked a police warning about increased heroin use in the city. The latest figures show the city's taxpayer-funded needle exchange program has seen a dramatic increase in the demand for the disposable needles from the 12,182 doled out in 1996 and 14,231 given out in 1997. Volunteers and staff handed out nearly 30,000 in 1999 and 52,000 last year, interviews and documents obtained by the Spectator under Freedom of Information legislation reveal. The needles are used by intravenous drug users to inject heroin, cocaine, the prescription drug dilaudid, and, more rarely, speed (methamphetamine). Free needles help reduce needle sharing, and are viewed as a key weapon in the battle to cut HIV and hepatitis C infection rates. But neither police nor public health officials are able to say definitively whether the increase is due to greater awareness of and trust in the program among the city's tight-knit circles of junkies, or to a true jump in the number of drug addicts. That's because the program counts needles handed out (and brought in) and client ''contacts'', but doesn't track specific individuals. Suzanne Newark, co-ordinator of The Van, the needle exchange and street health care centre, said she doesn't know how many individuals are using the program because ''I don't see it as a need.'' There is no limit to how many needles you can ask for at one time - the needle exchange program once gave 500 to one person. Newark admits she doesn't know how many addicts there are in the city but says she believes the jump in needle use reflects ''an increased awareness of the program.'' In 1997 a string of nine heroin overdose deaths led local police and the coroner to warn about an increased availability of the drug - and a upsurge in its potency. A local clinic reported seeing five teenagers seeking help for addiction in a two-month span, a previously unheard-of situation. Police said heroin traffickers were dropping their prices and increasing the drug's purity in an effort to win back drug users who had switched to crack cocaine. In Hamilton there were 14 overdose deaths in 1996 and 17 in 1997; more recent figures were not available late last week. Staff Sergeant Rick Wills, the current head of the Hamilton police vice and drug squad, say he often gets asked how many addicts the city has, but has no way of knowing. ''It's so close-knit, it's hard to identify heroin addicts - the addiction runs through every level of society, including the affluent. A functioning heroin addict can go for years'' without coming to police attention, Wills said. Wills said heroin was turning up in crack house raids and his officers were finding dealers ''cutting'' crack with heroin as a marketing tool, but heroin arrests and seizures were a minor part of their work and relatively flat. Studies by researchers with the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health identified 450 heroin addicts who were receiving methadone treatment services or would if they could get it. An 1990 study identified 176 junkies who had sought treatment, but estimated they represented just 7 percent of the total addict population. Regardless of the true number of intravenous drug users there are in the city, officials agree the dramatic increase in clean needles means injection drug users, the homeless, prostitutes and society's marginalized, are growing to trust health officials. Newark says ''Hamilton is a very small town in a way, with a closed environment. People are still pretty private and it takes a long time to build trust.'' The needle exchange is driven by public health goals, and Newark is convinced that without the exchange - and the 49,000 free condoms they distributed last year - Hamilton would have high rates of HIV and hepatitis C. There were 11 new HIV infections, contracted mainly through sex, reported in Hamilton in 1999, compared to 12 in 1998 and 23 in 1997. The needles and condoms are given out from a mobile van operating Monday to Friday nights from 8 to midnight, driving to wherever in the city drug users need clean needles. A user need only call 317-9966, and make arrangements. There are also seven locations in the city where drug users can exchange needles, including the Hamilton Aids Network on James Street South, the Elizabeth Fry Society on Main Street, and two pharmacies. Newark says the return rate of the needle exchange was 94 per cent last year. The van program also includes a street health clinic for the homeless, hookers, and down-and-out at the Wesley Centre on Ferguson Avenue North. The program is budgeted at a little over $50,000 a year, and a 1997 McMaster University study found it delivered good value. The study estimated Hamilton's program from 1992 to 97 saved taxpayers $1.3 million in health care costs. Still the programs are not without controversy. In Vancouver last August, an alliance of business and resident groups demanded an end to government-funded needle exchange programs because they said it was making problem worse by facilitating drug use. Newmark says Hamilton taxpayers are getting their money's worth. ''In keeping the infection rate (of HIV and hepatitis C) low, we keep the costs of medication and health care low.'' ''Since 1992 (when the program started), HIV hasn't become epidemic, so we must be doing something right.'' Ted Myers, a University of Toronto HIV studies professor, like others in the health field, is also convinced ''these outreach programs'' reach larger numbers of people who need help. But he admits ''I don't know if we have good evaluations'' of their cost-benefit ratio. Hamilton's social and public health services started their van needle exchange in 1992. It is now a ministry of health mandated program for communities where drug use is recognized as a problem. Halton has approved a $40,000 pilot van program for this year, although the region doesn't know how many will make use of it. Hamilton's The Van program also offers anonymous HIV testing, methadone treatment referrals to help drug users off heroin, addiction counselling, and pregnancy testing. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D