Pubdate: Mon, 07 Apr 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Margaret Munro, Canwest News Service JAIL NEEDLE SHARING ACCELERATES SPREAD OF AIDS Two Studies Documenting Used Syringe-HIV Connection Spur Calls For Needle Exchange Programs For Prisoners Up to 15 per cent of incarcerated drug users report injecting heroin and cocaine while behind bars, according to one of two new studies that say Canadian prisons are contributing to the spread of the virus that causes AIDS. The findings are so worrisome the researchers at the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, who conducted the studies, have renewed calls for in-prison needle exchanges to reduce the risk of dirty syringes spreading HIV and hepatitis C infections, which are common among inmates. The sharing of used needles in prisons is "a recipe for disaster," says Dr. Evan Wood, a principal investigator on both studies. The first, in this week's advance online edition of the Journal of Public Health published by Oxford University, followed 1,247 intravenous drug users, half of whom spent time in jails at some point during the six-year study. Almost 15 per cent of those incarcerated reported injecting heroin or cocaine in prison, most of them with used syringes. The second study, published in the Drug and Alcohol Review this week, followed another group -- 902 injection drug users at Insite, Vancouver's controversial supervised injection facility. Approximately one-third reported spending time behind bars at each six-month follow-up in the two-year-long study and five per cent reported injecting drugs while incarcerated. "People who had been incarcerated were more likely to report syringe sharing and more likely to be infected with HIV and hepatitis C as compared to non-incarcerated injection drug users," the researchers said. Wood said in an interview the studies likely underestimate the rate of syringe sharing, which many people are reluctant to admit. He said a "coordinated public health response" is needed to address the risk of disease transmission from prisons to not only protect inmates, but the "home communities" they return to. "We're doing everything we can to try and stop people from sharing syringes," Wood said, referring to community-based addiction treatment programs and needle exchanges across the country. "Then, you follow drug users over time to see where we are falling short and prison jumps out as a reason people are lending and borrowing syringes." The drug users in the studies were incarcerated in B.C. correctional facilities. But Wood and his colleagues suspect syringe sharing is common in jails across Canada. They said the findings underline the "urgent need" to expand harm-reduction programs in Canada's municipal, provincial and federal correctional institutions. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek