Pubdate: Thu, 13 Jan 2005 Source: Lompoc Record (CA) Copyright: 2005 Pulitzer Central Coast Newspapers Contact: http://www.lompocrecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/242 Author: Erin Carlyle, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) COUNTY WEIGHS ALLOWING SALE OF NON-PRESCRIPTION NEEDLES In an expansion of a clean needle program for intravenous drug users, Santa Barbara County pharmacies could soon be selling hypodermic needles without a prescription to anyone who requests them. The county Board of Supervisors is scheduled to discuss the possibility Feb. 22, after a new state law effective this year gave counties and cities the option. Currently pharmacists may sell hypodermic needles only to patients who have prescriptions, such as diabetics. The state's new program - known as the Disease Prevention Demonstration Project - is designed to work in concert with needle exchange programs that aim to reduce the spread of HIV, Hepatitis C, and other blood-borne diseases. The Pacific Pride Foundation, a nonprofit group with offices in Santa Maria and Santa Barbara, already has a free syringe-exchange program for drug users. Heroin addicts, meth users, steroid injectors, or transgender persons who inject hormones get one needle for each that they return, said Janet Stanley, chief executive officer of Pacific Pride. Every two weeks, county officials declare a state of emergency authorizing the nonprofit's needle exchange program. Adding the state program could help the overall health of county residents, according to officials. "This is considered to be a complementary strategy to reducing blood-borne disease through needle exchange programs," said Michele Mickiewicz, deputy director of county Public Health. "It is the Public Health Department's view that we would be interested in seeing the board support this." Stanley said her program would remain in place even if the board approves the pharmacy program, because many users may not be comfortable asking for syringes in a pharmacy, where other customers may see. "People feel hesitant asking for birth control methods, let alone saying 'I'm here for a needle exchange program,'" Stanley said. But Andy Caldwell, executive director of the Coalition of Labor, Agriculture and Business, questions whether maintaining the local emergency that authorizes the Pacific Pride program would be necessary when addicts can purchase needles at the pharmacy. A critic of the needle exchange program, Caldwell has argued that it may actually encourage drug use. Medical professionals say there is no evidence to support that idea, and contend that exchange programs reduce the spread of disease. No government funding or local tax dollars are used in Pacific Pride's program. However, implementing the new state law locally would cost the county, Mickiewicz said. Officials are working to calculate those costs, she said. If the board decides to implement the new program, pharmacies could choose to participate. A maximum of 10 syringes could be sold at a time, but there are no limits on how often a client could return to buy more, Mickiewicz said. The law requires participating pharmacists to register with the county. Pharmacists would also have to provide written information or verbal counseling on how to access drug treatment, where to go for testing and treatment for HIV or Hepatitis C, and how to safely dispose of needles. Participating pharmacies would have to provide either a receptacle for the used needles or sell personal receptacles that could be taken home, Mickiewicz said. It is the health department's responsibility to provide the written materials for pharmacists to hand out or orally discuss, Mickiewicz said. The new rules are slated to expire at the end of 2010, and that year the state Department of Health would submit a report on the effectiveness in reducing the spread of blood-borne disease. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek