Pubdate: Fri, 30 Nov 2007 Source: Western Star, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2007 The Western Star Contact: http://www.thewesternstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2523 Author: Cliff Wells Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) AREAS OF PROVINCE SHOULD HAVE OWN NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAMS, SAYS CO-ORDINATOR CORNER BROOK - Tree Walsh wants the needle exchange program in St. John's expanded to help intravenous drug users in other parts of the province. The safe works access program and harm reduction co-ordinator for the AIDS Committee of Newfoundland and Labrador, said the program in St. John's works for that community, but other communities have needs that wouldn't be easily met by the model used in the capital. At a press conference unveiling the Injection Drug Use In Newfoundland and Labrador report at the Dunfield Park Community Centre, she said she doesn't know what that might look like just yet, but she wants to explore the possibilities with partners. "Putting a needle exchange in Joe Batt's Arm may not work," Walsh said. "But having your public health nurse trained and giving him or her the authority to distribute clean needles to people who are using and accepting their used needles into the system that already exists is a very low-cost, simple way to begin." She said her group wants to lower the numbers of testing positive for HIV and hepatitis C - bottom line. She said the group is hoping policy makers, service providers and people who inject drugs will recognize it's a health issue in communities, and services will be put in place to reduce the barriers for people who use drugs to get the services they need to stay as healthy as possible. "I think you work with the people in the community you're trying to help," she said. "They're the people who know what's best in their community. "Of course, there's NIMBY - Not In My Back Yard - we don't want it around here. The reality is the problem is here. If needles are being found on the ground, there's a problem." Fred Andersen, reaching injection drug users project co-ordinator, said a needle exchange program is not rocket science. He said either you have safe needle containers in a few places, or you have needles strewn on the ground outside where children play. "I think a needle exchange is vital," Andersen said. "Everything I say comes from what the users told me. In this community here, they told me they need a needle exchange program. They really need it." Kim Dawson, chair of the AIDS Committee of Western Newfoundland, said it's great to have a document like this unveiled outside St. John's. "Dunfield Park Community Centre was a key community centre involved in accessing some information," said Dawson. "It's great timing because this is AIDS Awareness Week and (Saturday) is World AIDS Day." Ben Fitzgerald, executive director of the Dunfield Park Community Centre, said a needle exchange program wouldn't add to the stigma attached to the community. He said when the snow melts, he'll find about 100 used needles on the grounds in the spring, so working toward a solution is important. He said any program to reduce the number of needles around the community will help. He also said health and community services would have to be on board. "I view the needle exchange like I view a condom exchange," Fitzgerald. "I think it's going to have to be part and parcel with the health care approach. If the health care approach is put in place, I think something like that could possibly work - absolutely. "Let's face it, they're ending up on the ground in the streets around the kids anyway. If we can control where they do end up, and it doesn't affect the kids, then it's something we would have to look at." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom