Pubdate: Wed, 16 Aug 2006 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Joseph Hall, Staff Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) A BREEDING GROUND FOR COMMUNICABLE DISEASE Needle Exchange Program Urged HIV Affects 2% Of Adult Inmates Jim Motherall figures there were only seven to 10 usable needles making the rounds of Manitoba's Stony Mountain Institution at any one time during his 19 1/2 years inside the federal penitentiary. He calculates that more than 200 drug-using inmates would typically be sharing them. "So there was at least 20 guys on a syringe," says Motherall, who has spent a total of 32 years behind bars for myriad violent crimes and has spoken widely on prisoners' health issues. "And if one of those 20 had HIV and they're sharing a syringe, then it's just going on down the line." A University of Toronto study of Ontario prisoners presented at the International AIDS Conference in Toronto this week estimates that 2 per cent of the province's adult inmates are HIV-positive, or about 1,000 prisoners during the study years of 2003 and 2004. (The rate for hepatitis C among adult prisoners in Ontario was 17.6 per cent, the study found.) To contrast, just 0.2 per cent of the Canadian population is infected with the AIDS-causing virus. Several researchers and inmate advocates told the conference that corrections authorities were failing prisoners badly by offering no credible HIV/hepatitis prevention program in jails and prisons. With no prisoner needle-exchange programs running anywhere in Canada, and badly flawed condom and safe-tattooing programs, prisons have become breeding grounds for communicable blood diseases like AIDS and hepatitis C, scientists and prison advocates warn. "If there was as much HIV and hepatitis C transmission in Canada as a whole as there is in Canadian prisons, there would be a public outcry and Canada would have the worst AIDS problem in the developed world," Joanne Csete, executive director of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, told a news briefing yesterday. "People expect the sentences that are handed down by the courts, but they shouldn't have to have a life sentence of HIV or hepatitis C," she said in an interview. The U of T report, titled Prevalence and Risk Factors for HIV and Hepatitis C in Ontario Jails and Detention Centres, says injection drug use is by far the biggest culprit in the spread of both diseases among provincial prisoners. It's estimated that 30 to 50 per cent of prisoners in Ontario have a history of injection drug use. And the report says studies in Ontario and Quebec show that 5 to 8 per cent of inmates in those provinces have admitted to injecting drugs while behind bars. In male federal prisons, the drug injection rate, as reported by prisoners themselves, has reached 24 per cent. Yet nowhere in the country is there a program that gives inmates access to clean needles, advocates told the conference. Free-needle programs offered inside jails by a handful of liberal European countries -- as well as in some repressive states like Iran - -- have led to huge declines in HIV transmission between prisoners, Csete says. In Switzerland, a long-standing prison needle program has virtually eliminated transmission of HIV and hepatitis in jails. "It's stunning -- you really can stop it," Csete says. "There are all kinds of ways you can do these things, and they're extraordinarily effective. And unlike condoms, where you have to convince people to wear them, people who inject drugs want to have clean needles." Csete says there has never been a reported incident of needles being used as weapons in prison. And even if such an incident occurred, a clean needle would be preferable. Canadian programs for dispersing condoms behind bars have also been criticized. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman