Pubdate: Thu, 06 Apr 2006 Source: Technician, The (NC State U, NC Edu) Copyright: 2006 The Technician Contact: http://technicianonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2268 Author: Laura White Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) STUDENTS SPEAK OUT FOR REFORM March Promotes Clean-Needle Exchange Program Unprotected sex. Promiscuity. Irresponsibility. Homosexualty. When HIV comes into the conversation, these are the first things that pop into mind. However, there is always another side, another story, and while they aren't always pretty, they have to be shared. Even the smallest man needs a voice. Many groups are working toward HIV awareness on campus and within the Triangle, and a two-day event will highlight these efforts, culminating in a push for legislative reform on an often overlooked aspect of the HIV AIDS pandemic -- clean needles. NC Students United for HIV Prevention is an event designed to bring awareness to the clean-needle cause. It begins Thursday with a documentary being shown on the UNC-Chapel Hill campus about the activism surrounding affordable AIDS medication, and will continue on Friday with a march around downtown Raleigh to bring attention to the clean-needle cause. It will begin at the Bicentennial Mall and make its way toward the Governor's Mansion, making a temporary stop to rally in front of the mansion. Then the march will make its way around the Capitol building and end back at the Bicentennial Mall. Student Global AIDS Campaign is working with N.C. Harm Reduction to make this event possible. "Part of it is a lot of people our age in the United States see all the celebrities promoting, trying to help with the HIV AIDS pandemic in Africa, and they don't realize that it affects us in the United States a great deal," Jessie Howington, sophomore in environmental science and chapter leader of the N.C. State chapter of the Student Global AIDS Campaign, said. Howington has been interested in the fight against AIDS since about two years ago, when she went to a conference about the HIV AIDS pandemic in New York. Howington said the SGAC from UNC-CH got the NCSU chapter involved, and she was disappointed there had not been more interest from students at the University. "We really need more student support to show our legislature that this is one way to get truly comprehensive HIV treatments in the state," Howington said. Alyssa Fine, an alumna of UNC-Chapel Hill, said she is still actively involved in the SGAC there. She also works for the N.C. Harm Reduction Coalition, and she has been actively involved in making this two-day event happen. "Once students understand, they start to care about it," she said. "It's a difficult issue, a lot of misconceptions. It certainly isn't on the radar of most people." But just because it's still a small bleep doesn't mean there aren't big consequences. According to Howington, close to a quarter of all HIV cases originate from using dirty needles. A clean-needle exchange program would allow injection-drug users (IDU's) to come to a clinic and get clean needles to use for free. This causes less exposure to possible blood pathogens, which means a reduction in the spread of HIV through pre-used needles, as well as the exposure of these drug addicts to counseling and rehabilitation. The Syringe Exchange Programs, also known as SEP's, "can help prevent bloodborne pathogen transmission by increasing access to sterile syringes among IDU's and enabling safe disposal of used syringes. Often, programs also provide other public health services, such as HIV testing, risk-reduction education and referrals for substance-abuse treatment," according to the Department of Health and Human Services: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web site. Critics of the needle exchange program have called it encouragement for drug users, and according to the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation Web site, there are currently only two programs in North Carolina. While Fine isn't sure about the anti-needle sentiment of North Carolinians, she said the operators of these needle exchange programs are at risk for persecution under paraphenalia law, and that she feels "people understand that it's a necessary intervention." According to literature Fine has read, the legalization of these programs could save anywhere from $60,000 to $99,000 per infection. "So this is a big deal," Fine said. A statement like the one they will make with their march on Friday is an unprecedented one, a real "landmark kind of event," and Fine said she hopes it will provoke a change in the legislation. Howington said it's as big of an issue for students as it is for anyone else, and they too should be involved. "Half of all the new HIV infections are among people under the age of 25, which is college students," she said. "So people really need to be aware of that and really need to protect themselves." Whether or not the march changes N.C. Legislation on the clean-needle exchange program, the topic has caused a stir among students, and provoked active involvement across campuses nationwide, including NCSU. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake