Pubdate: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 Source: Record, The (Stockton, CA) Copyright: 2007 The Record Contact: http://www.recordnet.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/428 Author: Sara Cardine Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) NEEDLE PLAN STUCK When life gets too hard, Susette Carroll has to clutch her side to keep the pain at bay. Carroll is one of thousands of San Joaquin County residents suffering from Hepatitis C, a debilitating disease that attacks the liver. The 47-year-old Stockton resident is addicted to heroin and alcohol and has been living with the infection for nearly seven years. "I'm so sick all the time. I hurt so bad," she said, tears coming with every word. "I don't want to die." Where there's Hepatitis C, there's generally a dirty needle, said Ron Stockmann, HIV/Hepatitis C coordinator for the San Joaquin County Office of Substance Abuse. Over the past two years, California has enacted laws making it legal for cities and counties to create needle-exchange programs and enabling pharmacies to sell needles without a prescription. Last week, the Sacramento City Council approved the formation of an exchange program. In San Joaquin County, however, no action has been taken. For IV drug users such as Carroll, that means they get sick and stay sick, their numbers growing, while agencies work out the details of a program that may or may not be approved by the Board of Supervisors. In 2005, the year of the most-recent county data available, 965 people contracted Hepatitis C, while an additional 52 became infected with HIV. Up to 85 percent of the former were infected through dirty needles, Stockmann estimated, while as many as 50 percent of the latter were transmitted that way. County health officials said they have been preparing for more than a year to present the state laws to supervisors while working to build a consensus among community leaders and law enforcement. "We haven't taken it to the board yet, because we're trying to do our homework first," San Joaquin County Public Health director Bill Mitchell said. "There are some concerns by law enforcement folks." San Joaquin County undersheriff John Drummond said he supports needle exchange but acknowledges its polarizing effect on law enforcement. "The way law enforcement sees it, they either hate it (and) oppose it vehemently or they support it," he said. "People think automatically if we provide needles it's going to increase illicit IV drug use." Drummond, who has served on a committee with Mitchell to discuss the state legislation, said he wonders how well health officials' presentation will be received by the Board of Supervisors. Chairman Victor Mow said the board likely will require a discussion of the moral and ethical implications of legalizing drug users' access to needles. "Does this promote or condone the use of drugs or is it something that's happening and is a concern of public health?" Mow said. "These things need to be answered before a decision is made." Needle exchanges are part of a larger effort to reduce health issues among drug users. Advocates for such programs run up against the conventional notion that providing clean sharps condones drug use, said Hilary McQuie, director of the Harm Reduction Coalition's West Coast office in Oakland. "It takes care of people who are on drugs," she said of the program. "It reduces needle-stick injuries and keeps syringes off the streets. It's a place where people can come and not feel judged for who they are and get the help they need." Carroll said that practically every drug user she knows has Hepatitis C. Treatment for the bloodborne virus can take from six months to a year, and most county physicians require a patient to be completely substance free. No drugs, alcohol or even cigarettes is a tall order for addicts such as Carroll. So she exists in a downward spiral, drinking to wrestle a moment of relief from the pain, doing damage to a liver thats already has been racked by Hepatitis A, B and C. "I see a lot of people using each other's needles," Carroll said. "How come we don't have a needle exchange here?" [Sidebar] About The Bills SB-1159 (2003-04 Assembly): Approved by Gov. Schwarzenegger in January 2005, this bill allows California pharmacists to sell up to 10 syringes to adults without a prescription. Designed to prevent the spread of HIV and Hepatitis C, this bill lets county and city governments vote on whether they will allow local pharmacies to participate. AB-547 (2005-06 Assembly): Approved by the governor in October 2005, this bill lets cities and counties establish needle-exchange programs without having to declare a health emergency every two weeks. Prior law required continued declarations as a justification for the programs. To find more detailed information on the bills, visit www.leginfo.ca.gov/bilinfo.html. Type the year of the bill and keyword "syringe." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman