Pubdate: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 Source: Red Deer Advocate (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 Red Deer Advocate Contact: http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2492 Author: Susan Zielinski Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) SYRINGE BOXES WELL USED Red Deer's two community needle drop boxes pulled in 577 used syringes in their first 14 weeks. "Certainly we're seeing it as a success. Five hundred and seventy-seven needles is a huge success," said Jennifer Vanderschaeghe, executive director of Central Alberta AIDS Network Society (CAANS). Monthly statistics show the box in an alley near the Arlington Hotel took in 365 needles, most of them in May and August. The needle box at Rotary Recreational Park near the Golden Circle collected 212, with 204 dropped off in August. "It's going to peak and valley significantly," said Vanderschaeghe who suspected the needles at Rotary Park may have come from one person getting rid of a collection of needles. Since the one-year pilot project began in May, another neighbourhood has looked at getting a box. Vanderschaeghe said the positive interest is a good sign for the project, but it will take time to expand. Grande Prairie's HIV North Society will soon set up its eighth drop box and has collected 640 needles since July 2002. Brenda Moore, executive director of HIV North, said boxes have gone up in several locations. Those locations include the parking lots of a mall and a grocery store, at the local Alberta Alcohol and Drug Abuse Commission office, on city property, and on the business property of concerned citizens. Moore said people using drugs on the street make use of the boxes more than those who have a place to go to inject drugs. So it's likely more transient or homeless people using them. Drop boxes don't reduce the use of syringes, but they also don't increase syringe use either. They help to eliminate both needle-stick injuries and promote safety awareness, she added. Red Deer drop boxes are part of CAANS's needle exchange program. Needles are distributed and collected at the CAANS office, Hilltop Pharmacy, and the Helping Hands Mobile Van. CAANS hands out an average of 6,390 needles monthly to reduce the spread of diseases like hepatitis C, HIV and AIDS through needle sharing. When Red Deer had a population of about 72,000, CAANS handed out 83,368 between April 2002 and March 2003. By comparison, Grande Prairie, with a population of about 40,000, saw 22,729 needles handed out during the same period. Vanderschaeghe said the number of needles distributed in Red Deer dropped after the local methadone clinic opened in November 2002. But the rate is now climbing. "We're seeing an increase in our injection drug users. We're inching our way back up." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek