Pubdate: Tue, 05 Oct 2004 Source: McGill Tribune (CN QU Edu) Copyright: 2004 The McGill Tribune Contact: http://tribune.mcgill.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2672 Author: Katie Higginson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) SHOOTING UP THE RIGHT WAY How Could a Clean, Safe Place Be So Controversial? NIMBYism is alive and kicking today in Montreal. CACTUS, a needle exchange clinic operating on rue St-Hubert, is garnering negative attention for providing clean syringes, condoms, water and bleach to injecting drug users. From the outside, the building does not announce the organization's purpose; a single address on the door, and a row of cactus plants in the window are the only link to the program's name. Credited with offering support and materials to an estimated six thousand heroin users in Montreal, the Centre d'action communautaire aupres des toxicomanes utilisateurs de seringues (CACTUS) aims to reduce the number of injecting drug users using contaminated needles in an effort to lower the transmission rates of HIV, Hepatitis B and skin infections within the city. According to the Canadian National Task Force on HIV, AIDS and Injection Drug Use, approximately 20 per cent of injection drug users in Montreal are HIV positive, and 70 per cent have Hepatitis C. CACTUS, however, concentrates less on numbers and more on aiding the individual. Employing ex-users as staff, CACTUS aims to make conditions more humane for the organization's clientele. "The idea is to help them help themselves," says Darlene Palmer, an ex-heroin addict and current employee of CACTUS. Since July 1989, clients have been able to come in from the streets seven nights a week to exchange their used needles for clean ones. Previously operating on a needle quota system, the clinic now distributes more than 400,000 syringes a year to addicts who might otherwise consider sharing needles out of desperation or indifference. As needle exchange pilot programs in Merseyside, England, have shown, a service like CACTUS can actually help decrease crime rates, and ensure a better chance of survival for those injecting drugs. However, not everyone agrees with CACTUS's mission. "[Needle exchange] programs in large metropolitan areas may be serving to foster new social networks. Ultimately, we cannot rely on these programs alone to stem the HIV tide: they must be integrated with a wide range of additional services that emphasize treatment and rehab over a punitive approach," writes Catherine Hankins, an adjunct professor from the department of epidemiology and biostatistics and associate director of the McGill AIDS Centre, in her editorial, "Needle exchange: panacea or problem?." In Montreal, the problem of infection has been worsened by the general shift from heroin to cheaper drugs like cocaine. As CACTUS employees confirm, because the cocaine high doesn't last as long as the effects of harder drugs, abusers end up injecting 20 times a day to achieve the same result, each time requiring sterile equipment that is not readily available on the street. The need for prevention is all the more emphasized by the fact that a single HIV infection costs health services $100,000 in care. Yet CACTUS alone cannot make a difference. "In its report of May 1997, the National Task Force on HIV and Injection Drug Use recommended proposals for improved needle exchange programs," explains Hankins. But the programs alone are not sufficient, as Hankins further explains: "The task force also advocates the integration of needle exchange programs with a wide range of additional health services, including detoxification, treatment and rehabilitation programs, health promotion and nutritional counselling, self-esteem training and advice on safe injection practices." The problem of drug-related disease is very real in Montreal. "A lot of repression has sort of pushed everyone all over the place," says Palmer. "It is inhumane in the winter time to ask people to shoot [up] outside. I think they're entitled to have places where they can just do it differently." As for the critics, they should be encouraged to see the human face of addiction, instead of condemning what they don't necessarily understand. CACTUS is located at 1626 rue St-Hubert. For more information, call 847-0067. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake