Pubdate: Fri, 13 Oct 2006 Source: Whitehorse Star (CN YK) Copyright: 2006 Whitehorse Star Contact: http://www.whitehorsestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1493 Author: Matthew Little Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) 92 PER CENT OF NEEDLES ARE RETURNED, 6,000 AREN'T Needles. They're a nightmare for kids and irritant for adults. But a needle from a doctor is entirely different from a used drug needle hiding like a snake in the grass where children may play. It's a hard problem to solve entirely and Whitehorse does better than most, said Becky Huston, a health promotion worker with Blood Ties Four Directions Centre. The centre operates a needle exchange program aimed at reducing the transmission of HIV and Hepatitis C. "We basically provide all the equipment that could transmit HIV or Hep C," she said. Besides needles, the centre gives users sterile water, cotton balls, tourniquets and needle disposal boxes. Last year the centre gave out 78,714 needles and 72,309 came back for a 92 per cent exchange rate. That stacks up well compared to other cities, said Huston. "Our intake to exchange rate is optimal." However, even that noteworthy success left more than 6,000 needles unaccounted for. Those needles pose a health risk to people that may come into contact with them. Many of those needles end up in parks and downtown green spaces favoured by families. In an afternoon stroll along at the base of the clay cliffs, Star reporters came across five needles in slightly out of the way locations. All the needles were capped and found near dirty blankets, empty mouthwash and alcohol bottles, condom wrappers and sometimes a burnt out campfire. Parks supervisor Doug Hnatiuk said that part of the city is well known to parks staff for having discarded needles. "We kind of expect them in certain locations of the city," he said. Other needle hot spots are along the waterfront and certain downtown parks, he added. Public Works manager Jim McLeod said the danger of discarded drug needles is one reason the city overhauled its garbage collection system. Used needles, he said, end up in street garbage barrels where they pose a danger to city workers who handle the bags. For that reason and others, the city has stopped using plastic bags in downtown garbage barrels and switched to black bins and a new automatic system to dump them in the truck. McLeod said no city worker has been hurt by a needle recently. "But in the past, I understand it's happened," he added. Needles don't just end up in the garbage or on the street though. "We'd see them down manholes at times," said McLeod. They also show up at the landfill, where a box of used needles was recently found in the metal section. "This is a big city issue, everybody has to be careful. You don't want anybody stabbed, you don't want (needles) in the garbage," said McLeod McLeod thinks the city and non-profit groups like Blood Ties and the Outreach Van, which also pick up needles, are handling the situation well though. "Its part of working in the 2000s it's no different from working in Vancouver or anywhere else." Vancouver, like Whitehorse, has a liberal needle exchange program that aims to ensure users do not spread HIV and Hepatitis C by sharing needles. Modern needle exchange programs have stopped requiring users to bring in a needle for every new needle they receive. Now users are simply given whatever needles they require. A recent City of Vancouver report on street cleaning in the infamous Downtown Eastside says that Vancouver's needle exchange policy "has created a healthier and safer environment for drug users but has also resulted in a significant number of used syringes and other drug paraphernalia discarded in the public realm." McLeod said he has also seen an increased number of discarded needles in Whitehorse. But the risk posed by discarded needles is far less than the benefit the needle exchange program gives to the community, said Blood Ties executive director Patricia Bacon. "You have to look at the big picture." That picture includes the fact few people have ever been stabbed by a discarded needle while many people are infected with HIV and Hepatitis C through sharing needles. While Bacon said it is impossible to prove how many people the needle exchange has kept from contracting the diseases, it is well accepted the program has significant value. In the year-plus that she has been running the centre Bacon has not heard of a single case of a person accidentally stabbing themselves with a discarded needle. Nor has Hnatiuk, who said neither the parks staff trained to handle needles nor their co-workers have been stabbed to his knowledge. Bacon suggested more needle disposal boxes placed strategically throughout the city could lower the number of randomly discarded needles. And while Blood Ties only receives a bit more than $6,000 a year for its needle program, the cost to treat someone with Hepatitis C is five times as much, said Colleen Hemsley, a communicable disease officer with health and social services. Treating someone with Hep C costs upwards of $30,000 a year, she explained. "It's a long treatment, either six months or close to a year," she said. That cost climbs if the infected user requires a liver transplant, a long-term risk of Hepatitis C. Over 65 per cent of people with Hepatitis C are intravenous drug users, she said. If you come across a used needle don't touch it. Call Blood Ties at 633-2437, or the Outreach Van at 667-1333 after hours. While the Outreach Van only operates Tuesday and Thursday. Bacon said that MLA Brad Cathers has promised to extend that service to six nights a week. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek