Pubdate: Thu, 28 Oct 2004 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/EdmontonSun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Kate Dubinski, Edmonton Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) GUARDS WARY OF CONS' NEEDLE EXCHANGE Drug addicted cons will use anything to get high, and the only solution is government-funded needle exchange programs, say Edmonton health and prisoner advocates. They are responding to a report released yesterday that urges provincial, territorial and federal governments to set up prison needle exchange programs in Canada's prisons. But an Alberta prison guard union rep says he'd tell his staff to walk off the job if that happened in the province. The report, by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network and first reported yesterday by Sun columnist Mindelle Jacobs, says one out of 50 prisoners is known to be HIV-positive. There were 251 HIV cases in federal prisons in 2002. And it's rising. In Edmonton's provincial jails, there were 441 cases of HIV in 2000 and 632 in 2003. Between July and December 2003, 23 cases of HIV/AIDS were reported as a result of injection drug use in Alberta's prisons. In the last 18 years - from August 1985 to December 2003 - 489 cases of HIV/AIDS were reported as a result of injection drug use. "We're putting people in jail for addictions," said Marliss Taylor, director of the Streetworks needle exchange program. "It's a health issue." Prisoners have jabbed themselves with ballpoint pen refills, pouring a solution of drugs and water into their veins, said Brad Odsen, head of the John Howard Society of Alberta. But Mike Rennich, chairman of AUPE Local 3 - which represents provincial corrections officers in all of Alberta - said needle exchange programs in prison would only put guards in danger and condone drug use among inmates. "Drugs are illegal. We have a hard enough time controlling the inmates,"Rennich said. "No one is sticking up for corrections officers." But the corrections system - at all levels, from guards in provincial prisons to Corrections Canada - has been shifting it's perspective on the health risks of drug use within the system, said Joann Woloshyniuk, acting executive director for HIV Edmonton. "Tattooing, drugs, they do go on, and there have been some strides in looking at public health. "This (needle exchange program) would be the biggest." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek