Pubdate: Wed, 03 Aug 2005 Source: Daily Breeze (CA) Copyright: 2005 The Copley Press Inc. Contact: http://www.dailybreeze.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/881 Author: Gordon Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) LOS ANGELES COUNTY TO FUND NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAM Supervisors OK Measure Aimed At Halting Disease. South Bay's Don Knabe Opposes It. A divided Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors narrowly approved setting aside $500,000 for a needle exchange program that will make the controversial service available in local communities other than the city of Los Angeles for the first time. On a 3-2 vote, with Supervisors Don Knabe and Mike Antonovich opposed, the board agreed that the county's public health services agency should fund local nonprofit groups to provide clean syringes to drug users in an effort to curtail the spread of HIV, hepatitis and other potentially fatal, infectious diseases. There are 72,000 active intravenous drug users in Los Angeles County, and about 45A percent of them share needles, said Jonathan Fielding, the county's public health director. The South Bay is one of several areas around the county that health officials have identified as having "priority needs" for a needle exchange, he said. "We're not providing drugs or condoning drug use in any way," Fielding emphasized. "What we want to do is try to prevent those who use drugs from transmitting potentially fatal diseases," including HIV and hepatitis B and C. Studies have shown that needle exchange programs reduce the transmission of these and other diseases, he added. But his arguments did nothing to sway Antonovich, who was openly scornful about the county's involvement in providing free needles to drug users. Among other things, Antonovich complained that those who ask for clean needles won't be required to show any identification proving they are at least 18 years old. "It's interesting that a student in high school is not allowed to have an aspirin from the nurse if he has a headache without parental consent, and yet (through this program) you can obtain a needle for illegal drug use," he said. "What we need to have are aggressive drug rehabilitation programs, not a politically correct system that fosters (drug users putting) this poison in their system," Antonovich added. But Anna Long, chief of staff for the county's public health services, said requiring personal identification scares off the users, defeating the purpose of needle exchange programs. Fielding said the city of Los Angeles currently has seven needle exchange programs that serve about 11,600 drug users. His agency will solicit proposals from the nonprofit groups that provide these services, and will ask them to expand their reach to other parts of the county. Fielding said the $500,000 in tobacco settlement funds set aside Tuesday by the supervisors would pay for "probably" four mobile sites and one fixed site where drug users could obtain unused syringes in exchange for used ones. "Our expectation would be reaching another 10,000 people," he said. Knabe questioned whether the board's recent action to allow pharmacies to sell syringes without a prescription already goes far enough in limiting the spread of HIV through needle sharing. But Long said the county-funded program "will reach injection drug users who are homeless or very low income and cannot afford to buy syringes at pharmacies." "This is a life and death matter, not only for the person, but (sometimes) for their babies," pointed out Supervisor Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, who represents a large swath of the inland South Bay. "What we're trying to do is to help people who won't help themselves. It's a reality." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth