Pubdate: Thu, 22 May 2003 Source: Kingston Whig-Standard (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The Kingston Whig-Standard Contact: http://www.kingstonwhigstandard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/224 Author: Greg McArthur Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) NEEDLE EXCHANGE IN PRISONS TOO RISKY: GUARDS Local News - A needle exchange program in Canada's prisons will add another weapon to the arsenal of devices that inmates use to wound and intimidate prison guards, says the regional president of the correctional officers union. Jason Godin said the union is worried about recent comments made by two prison health care experts, who publicly supported a program for inmates to exchange their dirty needles for clean needles. "We will fight this tooth and nail if [the Correctional Service of Canada] decides to implement this," he said. Last week, Dr. Peter Ford called for a national public debate about the spread of hepatitis C among federal inmates in an article published in The Whig-Standard. Ford - a consultant to the Correctional Service who conducted two landmark studies of intravenous drug users in two area prisons - said a needle exchange program would stanch the spread of hepatitis C because drug addicts wouldn't share the few needles that are snuck inside prison walls. Inmates are prohibited from having needles in federal institutions and the Correctional Service has a zero-tolerance policy on illegal drugs. Dr. Jonathan Standley, the head physician at Millhaven Institution, also supported the idea of a needle exchange program in a Whig article published Tuesday. The head of health care for the Correctional Service could not be reached to comment on the recommendation. The doctors have the health of their patients in mind, but don't recognize the dangers that guards would face if needles were allowed to proliferate in prisons, Godin said. In the past two years, two local guards have been stabbed with needles, Godin said. Another guard at Kingston Penitentiary was dragged into a shower by inmates who tried to beat him. After the attempted attack, it was discovered that needles were taped to the bottom of a bench. Godin said the needles were placed there so the attackers could stab the guard. Godin said he didn't know of any incidents where a guard had been stabbed and contracted a virus as a result. But whenever a guard is stabbed he or she has to be treated with a precautionary cocktail of drugs that can help prevent an HIV or hepatitis C infection, Godin said. "It's a terrible ordeal," said Godin, who said the harsh side-effects can leave someone weak and bed-ridden for weeks. "It puts a hell of a strain on their home life, their personal life and their mental well being." Stopping the flow of illegal drugs into prisons is difficult, even with the zero-tolerance policy, Godin said. The ion scanners that guards use on visitors are fairly effective, but they can't detect drugs that are hidden in body cavities, he said. If a needle-exchange program were introduced, drug use would be even harder to get a handle on, he said. "The bottom line is, even one needle is too many." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh