Pubdate: Fri, 7 Dec 2007 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Victoria News Contact: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Rebecca Aldous Cited: AIDS Vancouver Island http://www.avi.org Cited: Vancouver Island Health Authority http://www.viha.ca Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) NEEDLE EXCHANGE FACES BIG CHALLENGE Officials Hope Transition to New Home Will Be Smooth Writing from the William Head Institution, Terry Doucette explains how Victoria's only fixed site needle exchange saved his life. "Just before cleaning up I had caught Methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), a type of blood poisoning, and didn't even realize it. I was literally days away from death," Doucette said. Needle exchange staff drove him to hospital and made sure he received treatment. Three years later, the 32 year old is pleading with the community to coexist with the needle exchange and help it find a new location. "Please realize the exchange saves lives and recovery from addiction is a long process. Please don't be so quick to judge, instead let's figure out a solution," Doucette said. Last week the centre received a lease termination notice for its facility on Cormorant Street, which is welcome news to nearby residents and business that sought a temporary injunction to close the operation because of loitering and drug use outside the facility. Katrina Jensen, AIDS Vancouver Island executive director, who oversees the facility, has no idea where the exchange will end up, but she does know the transition must be seamless. Serving some of the city's most vulnerable population, it is paramount the exchange finds a new home before it's forced out of its current location in six months. Interruption to services are simply not acceptable, she said. "Ideally (the new location) has to be close to downtown but not in a residential area," Jensen said. A $125,000 funding increase, announced by the Vancouver Island Health Authority last week, will not assist in finding a new facility but rather addresses neighbourhood concerns. The funding, the first increase since 1993, allows the exchange an additional staff member, bumping the roster up to three, to monitor activities in and around the centre. "We want to try and improve the service in its current location, so that we are not just moving the problem to another neighbourhood," Jensen said. "That will put us in the best position to find a new location." A report by VIHA also recommends the city implement alternative needle drop off and pickup sites to help disperse the concentration of people that use the Cormorant Street needle exchange. Vancouver has many needle exchanges to deal with the 2.6 million needles distributed annually. The majority of the facilities are housed in public health centres, said Viviana Zanocco, a Vancouver Coastal Health spokeswoman. "The bigger (needle exchanges) are in areas that are not residential and the smaller ones are in community health centres that are closer to residential areas. I am sure people don't even know that there are needle exchanges in them," said Zanocco. Erin Gibson, a health promotion and harm reduction employee with the needle exchange, just wants the media whirlwind and stress of finding a new home to be resolved. Gibson's focus, along with her colleagues, remains on the 60 regular clients she sees every day. "Right now a lot of the people's needs circle around dry clothing," said Gibson. The team's work consists of many small miracles, from connecting people to their families, to finding them medical help, which Gibson shrugs off as routine. "The people that we work with are amazing," Gibson said. "A lot of the large majority of the community see only the bad and it is so easy to dehumanize people then." Saving lives is the reason the exchange exists, she pointed out. According to the Public Health Agency of Canada statistics one in 10 drug users is HIV-positive and seven in 10 have hepatitis C. In 1996 the exchange handed out 128,000 needles. In 2006, that number rose to 740,000. The relocation could be a blessing. The Cormorant facility is too small, Gibson said. She would like space for washrooms, showers and laundry facilities. In a report in February, AIDS Vancouver Island said it needed $585,000 -- more than double its current operating budget -- to run an ideal facility of 3,000 square feet. VIHA's recent cheque helps, Gibson said. VIHA will be working closely with AIDS Vancouver Island through its move, said Jocelyn Stanton, a VIHA spokeswoman. "The needle exchange is part of harm reduction, it is not going to be phased out," Stanton said. "It is something that we will work on with the community." AIDS Vancouver Island does not know if the organization's other departments -- volunteer services, the positive wellness program for people living with HIV and health promotion programing -- will be allowed to stay in the building on Cormorant Street. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake