Pubdate: Sun, 13 Jan 2002 Source: Star-Ledger (NJ) Copyright: 2002 Newark Morning Ledger Co Contact: http://www.nj.com/starledger/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/424 Author: John McLaughlin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) FINALLY, SOME SENSE ON NEEDLES James E. McGreevey and Clifton R. Lacy are my new co-heroes. McGreevey, who is going to be the new governor in 48 hours or so, and Lacy, the incoming health commissioner, say they are going to start a needle-exchange program for drug addicts in New Jersey. It doesn't go far enough, it is 20 years late, it won't work if it is structured too rigidly, and it could be done in by the state Legislature. But after seven years of irrational resistance by Gov. Christie Whitman and one year by former acting Gov. Donald DiFrancesco, the willingness of McGreevey and Lacy to look at needle-induced AIDS for what it is - a public health issue - is refreshing. Dispensing clean needles and paraphernalia to junkies in exchange for dirty, used equipment saves lives and it doesn't tempt the innocent to start perforating themselves. That's been the experience of 174 programs in 34 states over many years. That's the position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. That's the judgment of a host of professional health organizations, including the very conservative American Medical Association. Even Whitman's own hand-picked Advisory Council on AIDS endorses needle exchanges. Yet for seven years, none of that cut any ice with the former governor. Needle exchanges send the "wrong message," she proclaimed. And what would the children think of us if we inveighed against drugs on the one hand and dispensed them with the other? So what has sending the Right Message all these years wrought? Well, it could be worse, I guess. We could rank 50th among the states in containing the AIDS epidemic instead of 47th. And there are cities with worse records than Jersey City and Newark for AIDS among women and children - two to be exact. Not only have we been sending the Right Message all these years, we are operating under the Right Laws thanks to a state Legislature that thinks it can stop people from using intravenous drugs by outlawing their means of delivery. New Jersey is one of nine states that boldly banned the sale of syringes without a doctor's prescription. The result here is that the price of street needles rose to 20 or 30 times their retail cost, virtually guaranteeing a high rate of needle sharing because people who shoot up tend to be hard up as well. But that's one of the unfortunate side effects of our zero-tolerance policy. Laws that make a bad situation worse are the price a free society pays for virtue - that and a record of 700 babies who were born HIV positive and then went on to develop AIDS. And the No. 1 ranking for women with AIDS. New Jersey has a special AIDS problem. In most jurisdictions, the majority of HIV infections are the result of sex between male homosexuals. Here just more than half of the state's 42,000 active AIDS cases are the result of infected needles. You can, if you like, argue that junkies get what they deserve if they pick up AIDS. You can, if you are so disposed, argue that women who consort with addicts should know better. You can say that the wages of sin is death. But nobody can contend that an unborn child had it coming, that he deserves to be condemned to a horrible death before he is even born. McGreevey may find that getting legislative approval for needle exchanges is a heavy lift. Democrats, back in power after 10 years of weeping and gnashing of teeth, are going to be skittish about being perceived as soft on drugs. And many of the Republicans in Trenton are Whitmanesque on the issue and eager to see Democrats labeled soft on drugs. They should know that Connecticut revoked its ban on the over-the-counter sale of needles 10 years ago and not a single legislative supporter was unseated. There are miles to go before this is put to rest but it's good to know that after Tuesday we'll be sending a new message. When you strip the old one of all its senseless moralizing, it reads: "NJ. to Addicts: Drop Dead." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth