Pubdate: Wed, 19 Feb 2003 Source: Pekin Daily Times, The (IL) Copyright: 2003 Pekin Daily Times Contact: http://www.pekintimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2290 Author: Robert Merkin Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v03/n253/a09.html Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Beth+Wehrman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle exchange) NEEDLE EXCHANGES SAVE LIVES; DON'T PROMOTE DRUG USE Elizabeth Wehrman's arrest for possessing a hypodermic needle ("Needle Exchanges - Point of Controversy," Daily Times, Feb 8-9) is a critical moment for Pekin, whose citizens and public officials must now decide which of two paths to take: A path proven to lead to more HIV/AIDS and hepatitis, or a path proven to reduce the spread of these diseases. Yale University School of Medicine has provided scientific testing and support for New Haven, Conn.'s clean needle exchange since 1990. Within the first year of testing used needles collected by the exchange, Yale's study had firmly established that: * As the number of needles in circulation rises, the level of HIV infection goes down. * The longer a needle is in circulation, the more likely it will come back HIV positive. In other words, communities without clean needle exchanges guarantee significantly higher rates of HIV transmission. * Among needle exchange participants, there was a one-third reduction in new HIV infections (Yale Medicine Magazine, Summer 2001). Law-enforcement policies that forbid clean needle exchanges litter the streets, alleys, parks and playgrounds with haphazardly discarded needles with known high levels of HIV and hepatitis infection. Children and citizens in no way involved with needle drug use are thus placed at high risk of potentially fatal infection unnecessarily. Exchanges do not just distribute clean needles and safely collect and dispose of dirty needles. Needle exchange workers are the healthy community's street-level outreach to the needle drug using community. Exchange workers steer addicts to medical rehabilitation resources, and provide addicts with health information to keep them alive, as healthy as possible, and to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS and hepatitis until the addict seeks help to overcome his or her addictions. In a community that outlaws a clean needle exchange, needle drug users get their health resources and information exclusively from other users and from drug dealers/ Though Pekin Deputy Chief of Police Ted Miller claims Ms. Wehrman's needle exchange clients are "the drug dealers here in town," they are in fact the sons, daughters, mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers of Pekin's citizens. Far more to the point, they are Pekin's needle addicts at high risk of becoming infected and spreading infection to others. As Pekin's residents consider police opposition to a clean needle exchange, it is extremely important that they recognize the police have no professional training in medicine or public health, and that zero-tolerance law-enforcement policies have been a component of Pekin's increase in needle drug use and addiction. Ms. Wehrman should not be prosecuted. Pekin's doctors, nurses and public health officials should organize to support her efforts to establish a clean needle exchange in Pekin. Local law enforcement should also work with Lifeguard rather than try to criminalize it -- as local police have worked closely and cooperatively with my city's clean needle exchange for the past eight years. We are all far healthier and more free of needle addiction than we would have been without this important program. Robert Merkin is a resident of Northampton, Mass. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh