Pubdate: Fri, 22 Aug 2008 Source: Sudbury Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The Sudbury Star Contact: http://www.thesudburystar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/608 Author: Carol Mulligan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) THE POINT DOING VITAL WORK ON THE FRONT LINES Program Keeps Discarded Needles Off The Streets, Stops Addicts From Getting HIV, Helps Some Turn Their Lives Around Sudbury would be a different city were it not for its needle exchange program. The Point distributed 150,000 clean needles to drug addicts last year, and 95 to 99 per cent of them were returned to its headquarters at 105 Elm St. Otherwise, Sudbury's streets would be littered with needles discarded by illegal drug users. More people would be infected with HIV. There would be more cases of full-blown AIDS. The incidence of hepatitis C would be significantly higher. Hundreds of drug addicts would not have had access to a wide range of programs and services designed to help them change their lives and kick their habit. And Doris Schwar would never have been visited by a successful young man whose name she is still struggling to remember. "Here I am. Look at me now," he told Schwar when he returned to tell her a piece of advice she had given him years earlier had helped the former addict transform his life. He was now living in a five-bedroom home in Burlington. He owned a successful business. He was happily married and had three children. He owed it all to her. It's stories like this -- and she has dozens of them -- that keep Schwar working as program co-ordinator for The Point. Schwar was among those who worked "from the beginning" in August 1992 with the late Jimmy Park, founder of the Sudbury Action Centre for Youth, former medical officer of health Dr. Robin Bolton and Vicki Kett of ACCESS AIDS Sudbury to launch the program. She won't publicly take issue with Tony Clement's criticism of Insite, North America's only safe injection site, located in Vancouver. But she rolls her eyes when you ask her about Canada's health minister. Schwar quickly points out The Point is a safe needle exchange, not a safe injection site. Clement has questioned the ethics of physicians who support the use of supervised injection sites for addicts. Schwar is proud The Point has the best success rate for needle returns in Ontario, possibly Canada. Before The Point began operating, city police would arrest people in possession of dirty needles and addicts would just "ditch them" on the street. Schwar says she has heard of no such incidents recently and is grateful for the co-operation of police. Last year, the program was transferred from the jurisdiction of the health unit to the Sudbury Action Centre for Youth, an organization that works with troubled people of all ages. Schwar is one of three part-time employees of The Point, which is funded indirectly through the Ministry of Health and Long- Term Care. Mardi Taylor is the new executive director of Sudbury Action Centre for Youth. The way Taylor sees it, it is better for addicts to "come here than to be out there. We need the community to support us." Sixteen years after it begun, Schwar is as convinced as ever that the program is worthwhile. In a field in which there is a very high rate of burnout, Schwar remains philosophical about the work she does. "I'm not in charge of saving people," she says. "I just delight in them doing well." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom