Pubdate: Thu, 25 Sep 2003 Source: Smithers Interior News (CN BC) Copyright: 2003, BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.interior-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1631 Author: Larissa Ardis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) SECOND NEEDLE EXCHANGE CONSIDERED Smithers will soon be home to a second needle exchange site, if a proposal under discussion by service providers and local health professionals becomes a reality. The facility, which could open as early as November, would operate out of Positive Living North West's First Avenue office and complement the needle exchange that has operated in the Smithers Public Health Unit since 1994. It would provide injection-drug users with a safe needle-disposal service and free, clean needles, and offer referrals to addictions counselling. According to Deb Schmitz, Positive Living's executive director, evidence suggests local demand strongly warrants a second exchange. Although the Health Unit's exchange officially operates only two hours per week, it exchanged 8,800 needles in 2002: more than double the amount exchanged in 2001. The second exchange would significantly extend access for users, as Positive Living could offer exchange services throughout the office's working hours and possibly one or more evenings per week. Schmitz says a second site would also offer more opportunities for users to make contact with the health system, and for researchers to collect non-identifying information about the drug-using community to more effectively shape preventative education programs. Kathy Davidson, the public health nurse who operates Smithers' needle exchange, believes a second exchange at Positive Living might eliminate a barrier experienced by some drug-users about using the Health Unit's service: fear of going to a needle exchange in the building which houses probation officers and the courts. Both Davidson and Schmitz say more accessible needle exchange services would benefit the community, as educated local injection drug-users learn the importance of disposing needles safely and preventing the transmission of strongly associated conditions such as HIV and Hepatitis A, B and C between users and to the non-drug using population. And, Schmitz points out, users who learn to take better care of these chronic health conditions ultimately cost the public health system less. The new service would incur few new costs beyond initial training for Positive Living's existing staff, and supplies would be provided by the Health Unit. Schmitz says the proposal has met with favourable responses from local physicians, non-profit agencies, the Friendship Centre, the RCMP, and the places addicts sometimes turn to for needles when the Health Unit's exchange isn't open: the hospital emergency department and local pharmacies. She acknowledges work remains to be done to garner broader community support for the proposal, particularly from downtown businesses who may harbour concerns that more needles, or users, will show up in alleyways. "We're confident we can address their concerns," declares Schmitz, promising face-to-face meetings with community members, and an upcoming open house at Positive Living. Schmitz and Davidson encounter a variety of opinions about harm-reduction programs - including the argument that injection-drug users, who are engaging in illegal behaviour, shouldn't be given free needles while law-abiding diabetics have to pay for theirs. "We give needles to anyone, and there are diabetics who use our service," says Davidson. Schmitz has also heard critics' claim that drug addicts shouldn't get treatment at all because they're already on a self-destructive, possibly fatal path. "That's a really scary, slippery place to go," she says. "We're all going to die. Do we not provide care to anyone?" Such "cruel, inhumane" reasoning, observes Schmitz, could well be extended to anyone who risks diabetes by over-consuming sugar, fat and processed foods, or consumes legal drugs well-known to lead to addiction, illness and death: tobacco and alcohol. "Addiction is one of the biggest challenges that our society faces," Schmitz continues. "Until we can truly provide good, meaningful care to some of the sickest people in our communities, we can't really claim to be caring, compassionate people." Chamber of Commerce president Sheri Howard said last week that she was unable to comment on behalf of Smithers' business community on the issue, as it hasn't been formally considered by the chamber members. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk