Pubdate: Fri, 08 Apr 2005 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2005 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: David Reevely Note: David Reevely is a member of the Citizen's editorial board. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) YES: CLEAN KITS SAVE BOTH MONEY AND INNOCENT LIVES No serious drug addict has ever decided not to shoot up, smoke, pop or snort because he wasn't sure of the purity of his drugs or the cleanliness of his gear. That's the assumption built into the City of Ottawa program that's handing out clean kits for the consumption of crack cocaine -- the same thinking underlies publicly funded needle-exchange programs and the safe-injection site experiment that's working so well in Vancouver that Toronto is considering following suit. It's possible that all the epidemiologists and drug-abuse experts have lost their minds, and convinced a lot of politicians, from Vancouver's ex-Mountie mayor to prohibitionist Sweden's drug czar, to follow them in their madness. Or maybe they're onto something. The idea is to maintain the goal of getting people off drugs, which are bad for addicts and those around them, while acknowledging that it's possible to lessen the harm drug use can do -- to make sure that drug users don't pose threats to anybody but themselves. For the record, Canadian and U.S. health authorities agree, after years of study, that needle exchanges don't promote drug use and they do cut the transmission of diseases. If someone's going to inject heroin no matter what (as good a definition of an addict as any) it's better for him to use a sterile, sharp needle than a dull one rinsed out with puddle water. More to the point, it's better for the rest of us. Using a dirty needle is one of the best ways we know to get HIV and hepatitis C. Do that and bang! - -- you're the health system's $100,000 problem. Spread it to another drug user and the taxpayer's on the hook for another $100,000. That's about a dozen knee replacements, at average costs, or nearly a million clean needles. Some estimates put the total social cost of one AIDS case as high as $500,000. Diseases spread beyond circles of addicts, too -- to secret users' unknowing sex partners, to prostitutes' johns and their families, to police officers who get stuck during arrests. Needle exchanges also provide health professionals with "points of contact" with addicts who otherwise might spend their whole lives in a netherworld of using and finding money to score and use again. A study centred on the Vancouver safe-injection site has shown that drug users there have been influenced by nurses' advice to follow safer practices even when they're shooting up on their own. The case for needle-exchange programs and safe injection sites is clear and convincing. The case for distributing clean crack pipes is, admittedly, not as strong. For one thing, the health threat from dirty pipes isn't as frightening as that from dirty needles. Anyone re-using a syringe injects a tiny amount of blood from the last user right into his veins. The danger with a shared crack pipe is more distant: germs can spread from one addict's burned, split lips to another's, but not all crack users are in shape that bad. Crack use also tends to be accompanied by more harmful behaviour that clean kits can do nothing about. Heavy crack users need a lot more of their drug than heavy heroin users do of theirs, which means they're more likely to do things like resort to prostitution to fund their addictions. A clean-pipe program reduces their risks, but trivially. And, done badly, such a program could bring other problems. The money's not a big issue (Ottawa's medical officer of health, Dr. Robert Cushman, estimates the annual cost at $2,500), but just as discarded needles are a threat to public safety, so are broken, cast-aside crack pipes. If the city gives them out, it must pick them up, too. Like needles, the clean-pipe kits should be available widely, through multiple channels, to keep any one spot from drawing in addicts who otherwise wouldn't be there and reduce the risk of creating new hotspots for predatory dealers. Some, like my colleague Patrick Dare and Ottawa's police chief, Vince Bevan, say a clean-pipe program uses tax money to subsidize (and therefore encourage) drug use. That can only be true if you believe addicts won't use if they can't find clean needles and pipes, which is patently false. It's also an argument for drug-testing people before they can eat in soup kitchens: if homeless addicts had to buy their own meals, maybe they'd make rational choices between eating and using. But we're not dealing with rational behaviour. We're dealing with people just functional enough to stay out of jail, but in thrall enough to addiction to pose life-threatening, and staggeringly expensive, risks to themselves and people around them. The responsible, decent, sound thing to do, for addicts and taxpayers alike, is reduce the risk and increase treatment programs' chances of helping them before it's too late. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom