Pubdate: Mon, 03 Mar 2008 Source: Press of Atlantic City, The (NJ) Copyright: 2008 South Jersey Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.pressofatlanticcity.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/29 Author: Michael Clark Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) ATLANTIC CITY'S NEEDLE-EXCHANGE PROGRAM BUCKS STATE TREND ATLANTIC CITY - It's hard to imagine things could be any worse for Tommy Fagan. The 25-year-old has been shooting heroin since he was 14, starting by secretly pinching the dope from his addict mother. His 11-year relationship with heroin has left him homeless, and in 2004 he tested positive for Hepatitis C, a disease he says he acquired because of his tendency to share syringes. "I could be worse off right now," Fagan says with his face in this hands, trying to quell a headache resulting from his head being cut open by a box-cutter during a recent altercation. "I could be dying from AIDS." Instead, Fagan learned last week he tested negative for HIV during a routine visit to the city's needle-exchange program. He says the clean needles he gets have prevented him from contracting the deadly disease or sickening others. Fagan is one of more than 200 heroin users enrolled in the city's pilot program since its inception in November. The program, located on the second floor of the Oasis Drop-In Center, was the state's first legal exchange and appears to be its only successful program. In just three months, the city's program has registered 204 users and sees about eight clients per day, according to recent statistics provided by the city Health Department. New visitors to the program must register by answering basic demographic questions and questions about their history of HIV testing and drug treatment. They also are assigned an identification number, and after six months will be asked other questions, such as whether they are still sharing needles with others and whether they have sought drug-addiction treatment. New participants are initially given 10 needles and one needle for every used needle they return. The amounts they are given when they return depend on how many times they shoot-up in a week. "Our goal is one shot, one syringe," Program Director Georgette Watson says. But addicts are offered more than just needles. A long line of clean paraphernalia is displayed in the back of the room, including small containers called cookers that clients can take with them to heat the heroin rock, as well as cotton bags, solution, alcohol preparation wipes, hand wipes and bleach. "The disease isn't just in the needle. We tell the people that come here, the disease lives in the cotton, the disease lives in the spoon," says Marcy Pinsky, a volunteer and former heroin addict. The city's needle exchange is a far cry from the state's other pilot programs operated in Camden and Paterson. While the program at the Well of Hope Drop-in Center in Paterson fights to attract users, Camden's exchange is done out of the back of a van. While both are the victims of low funding, Gene Brunner, the Atlantic City Health Department's HIV services coordinator, thinks the city's program is benefitting from its location. The program sits near busy Pacific Avenue, a popular stretch for area prostitutes and just a block away from The Boardwalk. It is also just four blocks from the bus center, a half-block from the jitneys and across the street from the John Brooks Recovery Center, a methadone clinic that works with the program. But its biggest asset is the popularity of the Oasis center below, operated by the South Jersey Aids Alliance. The center had already provided free HIV counseling and testing, drug-treatment referrals and other social services. Watson says the transition was surprisingly seamless. "We picked up right away," she says. Along with the program's convenient location, it has the funding to keep thriving. The resort pays staff salaries and also provides $50,000 yearly for purchases and supplies. "We're number one over here," says Joe Marino, a project supervisor at the Brooks center across the street who works to recruit clients. "I don't know if that's a positive or negative, but we are helping people. The one in Camden makes it look like the program is doing something illegal." For some, the state's authorization of exchanges in 2006 is nothing short of illegal. Opponents contend the programs do not work and, instead, aid addictions and send the wrong message. But Atlantic City officials have been advocating the legalization of needle exchange for years, viewing the program as an important health tool in a city where one in 31 black males lives with HIV or AIDS. In June 2004, City Council became the first governing body in the state to pass an ordinance approving needle-exchange programs, but the ordinance was struck down in court three months later. "This is a proven method," city Health Director Ronald Cash says. "It's a tool being used throughout the world. We believe it's going to work. We believe it is working. We're the model for the state." Shortly after noon Thursday, a new client named Tony walks into the exchange program with apprehension. After participating in the initial surveys, he is given new syringes and begins filling his brown paper bag with other accessories when he's approached by Marino. He's met with questions about getting clean and quickly relents, telling Marino he'll be entering a halfway house soon. "You have to be clean to get into a halfway house," Marino says. The conversation ends shortly thereafter. Tony is gone with his needles and no commitment to treatment or tests. For Marino, it's a difficult balancing act. "It's tough because you don't want to scare people off but you want them to know they can get help," he says. "It's tough, but we'll keep at it." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom