Pubdate: Fri, 04 Nov 2005 Source: Courier-Post (Cherry Hill, NJ) Section: South Jersey Copyright: 2005 Courier-Post Contact: http://www.courierpostonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/826 Author: Luis Puga NEEDLE DEBATE RE-EMERGES CAMDEN -- Kathy, a heroin user and prostitute, said she can't go on a "date" without getting high. And, she can't get high and keep a roof over her head without going out on dates. For the first week after she turned to prostitution, "I cried and cried," said the 31-year-old woman, who declined to give her last name. Kathy climbed into the Camden Area Health and Education Center's van on Wednesday. The van provides free condoms, HIV screenings, blood pressure tests and blood sugar screenings for the uninsured. Intravenous drug users are frequent clients. Van staff want to provide clients like Kathy with something else: a clean syringe. Not because they want Kathy to use more heroin, but because they want to stem the spread of HIV and hepatitis C. Last June, a syringe access program nearly began in the city. Calling the spread of HIV a health crisis, former Gov. James E. McGreevey issued an executive order in October 2004 to allow cities to implement syringe exchange programs statewide. His order was challenged in court by opponents of the program. The resulting injunction stopped programs in Camden and Atlantic City from being implemented. Now, proponents of needle exchange hope legislators will write a law to make needle exchange a reality. Intravenous drug users can't get clean needles in the state. To buy one in a pharmacy requires a prescription. "It's very frustrating," said Jose Quann, the mobile van's coordinator. On Wednesday, Quann had to give another van client the bad news about being HIV positive. Kathy said when the urge to use comes, it is like a sickness. "You go crazy," she said. "It's like the flu times 100." That's when cautions about sharing needles go out the window. Users will share with anyone, or even pick a needle up off the ground. Kathy came to the van for a bleach kit, a small plastic bag with instructions on how to clean a needle. Quann said it's not perfect. It doesn't stem the spread of hepatitis C, which, he said, is spreading faster than HIV. "It's like putting a Band-Aid on a huge gash," he said. Buying Users Time Quitting is the obvious solution. Kathy turned herself in to police late last year and spent three months in county jail to get clean. It can be a hellish experience, she said. When she got out, she started receiving public assistance and looking for a place to live. But still without a home by January, she returned to prostitution to get out of the cold and that meant using again. Johnny Gonzalez, 25, of Somerdale, came to the van for an HIV screening. He's been off heroin for six months. He heard about needle exchange from staff. "If they had it, I wouldn't have hepatitis C," Gonzalez said. He said users will get high no matter what and he doesn't think a needle exchange would encourage them. "This city has lots of drugs," he said. "If they don't (allow) needle exchange, then they are choosing AIDS." Quann said his clients aren't the only heroin users. There are also "functional users" -- people who shoot heroin, go to work, and have families. They can't get sterile syringes either and that's why he thinks legislators need to create a law to allow over-the-counter pharmacy sales. "We want people to live long enough so they can make some changes in their life," Quann said. "But, we keep losing people to dirty needles." Opposing Views The state Senate Health Committee is considering two bills this month - -- one that will allow needle exchange and the other to allow over-the-counter sales of syringes. Two committee members on opposite sides of the issue say they are ready for the upcoming fight. "In every town, every city, state and country that has syringe exchange programs wedded with counseling and treatment options, it's been proven time and again that these programs lower HIV transmission and save lives," said committee chairman, state Sen. Joseph Vitale, D-Woodbridge. However, Vitale will face strong opposition from state Sen. Ronald Rice, D-Newark, who filed suit with other legislators to overturn McGreevey's executive order to implement a needle exchange program. Rice said statistics can't fly in the face of common sense. "A free needle will keep you a junkie for the rest of your life," he said. He has proposed legislation to create regional residential detoxification centers similar to Newark's Broadway House. Rice said he wonders why needle exchange proponents aren't supporting it. "We need to give these (intravenous drug users) a place to go (and get treatment)," he said. "Public Health Crisis' Roseanne Scotti, director of the Drug Policy Alliance New Jersey, said 39 states have needle exchange programs. New Jersey is one of only four states that require prescriptions to buy syringes, she said. "Other states and cities continue to move forward (with needle exchange)," she said. "We are just getting further and further behind, and that's the point." Neither major-party gubernatorial candidate has come out with a definitive position on needle exchange. Vitale said most people know someone who has a substance abuse problem and those people need help. That includes sparing them from diseases, such as HIV, he said. "It's not a disease that happens in a vacuum," said Vitale. "It's a public health crisis." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman