Pubdate: Sat, 08 Sep 2007 Source: Sun Times, The (Owen Sound, CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://www.owensoundsuntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1544 Author: Don Crosby PUBLIC HEALTH STARTING NEEDLE EXCHANGES Aim Is To Keep Injection Drug Users Healthy A needle exchange program will start in Walkerton this fall as part of a year-long pilot project that includes sites in Owen Sound and Hanover. The medical officer of health told Bruce County councillors on Friday that the project will offer counselling, testing and clean needles in an effort to keep injection drug users as healthy as possible. "There are certainly people who use injection drugs daily and still keep a job . . . the goal is to keep drug users healthy and show some interest in their health," said Dr. Hazel Lynn. The project will assess the extent of injection drug use in the area. Lynn said the supply of clean needles will help stop the spread of blood-borne diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C. She noted there are 65 new cases of deadly hepatitis C each year in the area, many caused by sharing dirty needles and other drug paraphernalia. A similar program has been operating out of the Owen Sound office of the public health unit. Final negotiations are under way to set up needle exchange locations at a drop-in centre in Owen Sound and a pharmacy in Hanover. The pharmacy was chosen partly because drug users are already getting their needles at pharmacies, said Denna Leach, program manager of health promotion for the health unit. Pharmacies are also open later in the evening than the health unit. The needle exchange packages will contain information about where users can get help and phone numbers for referrals. Grey-Bruce is one of only three public health units without a needle exchange program. Such programs are mandatory public health programs in areas of Ontario where injection drug use is recognized as a problem in the community. The year-long study will help determine the extent of the problem and whether a full-time program is needed. Plans to run the needle exchange program at the Walkerton offices of the public health unit, which are located in the Bruce County administration building, is a cause for concern for Bruce County administration. Wayne Jamieson, the county's chief administrative officer, questioned whether there was enough security for needle exchange program in a building that is open to the public and used by administration staff. He worries that participants in the program would use public washrooms in the building to shoot up or discard used needles on their way in or out of the health unit. "We need to sit down and discuss this," Jamieson said. Lynn said participants in the needle exchange program must follow a code of conduct, which prohibits them from carrying drugs with them. They can be arrested if found to violate the agreement. She turned down a suggestion that the program be run out of the Walkerton hospital. Coun. Larry Kraemer said while there isn't a perfect place for such a program, it makes sense to have it at the health unit with its trained staff. "If it causes problems, we can deal with that," he said. Leach said there's an estimated 300 injection drug users in Grey-Bruce including steroid users. The majority are located in Owen Sound and Hanover. Leach said data shows there's an average 18 per cent decline in HIV in cities that have needle exchange programs while cities without such programs the incidence of HIV increases by 8.1 per cent. She said there's an important public education component to the program. She noted that needle exchange programs don't encourage the initiation of injection drug use nor does it increase the duration or frequency of injection drug use and 95 per cent of people who take part in a needle exchange stop risky injection behaviours. Leach said it's important not to stereotype injection drug users as vagrants living on the street, which is more common in big cities. Most are in their late 30s and 40s. Some are students. Many manage to keep a job. "We are studying where we can best create programs that will target areas in the north and the south of the region" said Leach. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart