Pubdate: Mon, 16 May 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: Carly Weeks Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Note: Online SoundOff at webpage NEEDLE EXCHANGE CAME TOO LATE: CUSHMAN HIV, Hepatitis C Cases Linked To Hesitancy To Confront Drug Problem Ottawa's reluctance to confront its drug problem in the late 1980s is the main reason the city is home to more intravenous drug users with HIV and hepatitis C than Toronto or Montreal, says the city's medical officer of health. While Toronto adopted the provincial needle exchange program in 1989, Ottawa's regional council opted to wait until 1991 to begin giving out clean needles and syringes, Dr. Robert Cushman explained this week, recalling the "bitter debates" at regional council about the idea, similar to current debates about Ottawa's crack pipe distribution program. Adopting needle exchange two years after Toronto is only a partial explanation for today's high levels of infectious disease among intravenous drug users in Ottawa. But, the answer becomes clearer when one considers the limits imposed on the exchange program after it was approved, said Dr. Cushman. "You can't afford to be behind on this. That's why we think we're worse than all the other cities but Vancouver -- because we got behind," he said. In the early days of the exchange program, there were strict rules about only giving out a needle if a drug user exchanged a used one. There was also a limit on the number of needles public health had to distribute, said Dr. Cushman. "Considering these people need scores of needles, we weren't coming close to dealing with the problem. It was more of a token than a real solution." It's estimated that there are between 3,000 and 5,000 intravenous drug users in Ottawa. Of those, 21 per cent are infected with HIV, while 76 per cent have hepatitis C, according to research by Dr. Lynne Leonard, professor and research scientist at the University of Ottawa's epidemiology and community medicine department. The department has been working with Ottawa Public Health to track the rates of people who inject drugs and have HIV or hepatitis C. Paul Lavigne, co-ordinator of the harm reduction program with Ottawa Public Health, echoed Dr. Cushman's views. "We started later and it took a while as a program to grow, to meet the needs," he said, suggesting that the late start and program limitations helped make Ottawa second only to Vancouver in terms of the number of intravenous drug users with HIV and hepatitis C. While the program was eventually expanded and more needles made available, treatment and rehabilitation options for people addicted to drugs are still underfunded, said Dr. Cushman. There are only three community-based methadone clinics in Ottawa, plus a methadone treatment program operated by the Royal Ottawa Hospital. "It's fair to say services are inadequate in Ontario, but unfortunately, they're even worse here," said Dr. Cushman. The ongoing effort to get the resources needed to fight the city's drug problem is a key indicator of why it's such a problem in the first place, said Dr. Cushman. "I think it's fair to say, except in the city core, it's been an invisible problem," he said. "When you look at where the votes are distributed, it's problematic because the downtown core, where this plays heavily, is under-represented in the council chamber." The city adopted an integrated drug strategy last week, which aims to bring city officials, the police, public health and other community leaders together to tackle Ottawa's drug problem with a unified voice. The new strategy followed an intense debate between police Chief Vince Bevan and Dr. Cushman at the city's health committee last month over the merits of the crack pipe distribution program. The city began giving out crack pipe stems and other drug equipment April 1 as a way to stop the spread of disease among users who share pipes. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman