Pubdate: Fri, 20 Jun 2003 Source: Walla Walla Union-Bulletin (WA) Copyright: 2003 Walla Walla Union-Bulletin Contact: http://www.union-bulletin.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2619 Author: Kathleen Obenland NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAM SEES RISE IN USE The increase may be due to more awareness about the program, or a possible rise in intravenous drug use. Drug addicts and other users took nearly twice as many syringes to a local needle exchange program in 2002 compared to the year before, according to the HIV/AIDS assistance agency, Blue Mountain Heart to Heart. Officials speculate the rise could be due to increasing awareness about the exchange program, a possible rise in intravenous drug use in Walla Walla, or both. Intravenous drug users exchanged 12,036 dirty syringes for clean ones last year, said Adam Kirtley, Heart to Heart executive director. In 2001, the agency received 6,318 syringes in the program. The number of people exchanging also has grown. Forty people visited the exchange in the first year of the program, 1998. Now it is around 100. Many bring in needles for others as well as themselves, so the real number of people exchanging cannot be accurately determined, Kirtley said. Most are white, middle-aged men. Some bring in just a few syringes, while others may exchange hundreds at a time. "We try to collect information about the people, but many don't want to give it,' he said. ``We know that most are from Walla Walla, and a few from outlying areas.' Exchanges this year seem to have kept pace with the high number in 2002, he said. Agency Volunteer and Prevention Services Coordinator Matt Testa-Wojteczko attributes the rising number of exchanges to the people who bring in numerous syringes for others. The agency has done a great deal of outreach in the past year to raise awareness and try to reduce the number of dirty syringes circulating in the community. Sheriff Mike Humphreys said that increasing methamphetamine use in the area likely plays a role. "It goes along with the meth problem we have,' Humphreys said. "More people are using meth, because it is a cheaper drug, and a lot of them are taking it intravenously. But I also think that education-wise, (Heart to Heart) has done a good job to help quell the problem of transmitted diseases.' Walla Walla Police Chief Chuck Fulton said his officers are seeing more syringes at crime scenes, which may indicate an increase in intravenous use of a variety of drugs. However, he does not support needle exchanges. While studies have not found that exchanges increase drug use, he doesn't like the message the exchange sends. "I think it is enabling, putting an 'It's OK' on the problem,' Fulton said. Heart to Heart started the exchange program in Walla Walla in 1998 to reduce the spread of HIV among intravenous drug users. Users get one clean syringe for every dirty one. Heart to Heart also occasionally receives syringes from people such as diabetics with legitimate reasons for having them, but the agency discourages the public from using it for general needle disposal, Kirtley said. "We're not set up for that,' he said. "Once, when the office was locked, someone actually left a bag of syringes outside the door.' Needle exchanges are done at Heart to Heart at 2330 Eastgate St. during office hours. In 2002, the agency also gave out 190 bleach kits to sterilize needles, 258 condoms, 88 educational and referral materials, and 3,902 booklets and brochures that dealt with preventing disease. Among the more popular booklets among users is "Getting Off Right,' an instructional manual for shooting up safely, Kirtley said. While abstinence is the best way to avoid HIV, the program recognizes that most of the people coming in are not going to stop, officials said. The goal therefore is to help them avoid disease. "We're not a substance abuse treatment facility, nor do we aspire to be,' Testa-Wojteczko said. "...The overriding purpose is disease prevention. The secondary goal is reducing the impact that drug use has on the Walla Walla community in general.' - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens