Pubdate: Sat, 03 Jan 2009 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Matthew Pearson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) ON THE FRONT LINE OF THE CRACK EPIDEMIC Rob Boyd gets up close and personal with 'clients' as he provides injection-drug users and crack smokers with materials to help them avoid disease, writes Matthew Pearson. A man in his 40s hands over a small piece of red paper. It's his ticket to the needle exchange, which offers much more than needles. The man tells the worker he's been smoking crack for more than four years. He asks for five glass tubes, each the approximate length and width of a king-size cigarette. The man will use the tubes to make crack pipes. He says very little, despite the worker's attempts to strike up a conversation, and leaves quietly with a brown paper bag. The exchange lasts less than five minutes. Rob Boyd has done this hundreds of times. Mr. Boyd is the director of Oasis, a social services program run out of the Sandy Hill Community Health Centre. Oasis provides myriad services for drug users, sex-trade workers, the homeless and people living with HIV or hepatitis C. Mr. Boyd says traffic increased dramatically after the City of Ottawa voted to quit funding a crack-pipe program in July 2007. The program was introduced in 2005 after a city-commissioned study found drug users preferred to smoke the drug rather than inject it. "Smoking cocaine is a far less risky behaviour than injecting cocaine, from a disease-prevention point of view," Mr. Boyd says. Fearing the city's decision would have dire consequences on crack users, Oasis and a number of other social service providers banded together to keep clean crack pipes accessible. In the 16 months since, Mr. Boyd says, visits to the needle exchange at Oasis have increased from 30 per month to 30 per day. But, as he explains, the needle exchange doesn't operate an "exchange" in the classic sense of the word. "Most people's concept when you talk about an exchange is that you bring one, you get one. Ottawa has not operated on an exchange basis for a significant number of years as a result of the fact that we have a cocaine use epidemic and that a one-for-one exchange doesn't provide sufficient needle coverage," he says. Earlier this year, the Shepherds of Good Hope, a downtown homeless shelter, decided its needle exchange would only hand out a clean needle if the user turned in a dirty one. City council explored the issue and decided against a one-for-one approach. Considering the crack-pipe decision of the year prior, Mr. Boyd admits he was fearful. "When they said 'no' to the crack pipes, the community stepped up and said 'yes' to the crack pipes. We don't know what would have happened if (the needles) went one-for-one, whether the community would have done the same thing," he says. There are "reasonable limits" placed on the number of items a client can get each visit. However, because of the link between the street-drug and sex trades, there is no limit on condoms. Oasis is blocks away from the ByWard Market and Lowertown neighbourhoods, the centre of the city's street-drug problem. The needle exchange is located in a booth in a corner, beside the elevator. A white noise machine buzzes overhead to increase client privacy. The walls are plastered with posters. One urges injection-drug users to dispose of needles responsibly, and not to leave their "toys" around. Workers ask each client a series of questions designed to gather data about how many people are using the facility. Mr. Boyd says 91 per cent of clients willingly provide the information requested, including such things as the last two numbers in their years of birth, first two letters of their mothers' names and how many years they have been using drugs. Oasis has been gathering this information from clients for the last six months. Mr. Boyd says it will help create an overall picture of crack use in the city, and gauge the number of people who smoke crack versus the number of people who inject it. The needle exchange provides injection-drug users with a variety of supplies, including syringes, sterilized water packets and tourniquets, while smokers can get glass tubes, screens, push sticks and mouthpieces in order to build crack pipes. Mr. Boyd explains the glass tubes heat up and can burn the user's lips, causing open sores that can then expose them to diseases such as HIV and hepatitis C if they share their crack pipes. Despite this, most people pass when offered the rubber mouthpieces. A young woman is next in line. She has long brown hair and bangs that hang down her face like curtains across her eyes. She speaks softly, shifting her weight from foot to foot. She is 24. She tells Mr. Boyd she has been using drugs half her life. If that shocks him, he doesn't show it. Most of the people who visit Oasis are homeless. In addition, Mr. Boyd estimates that between 60 and 80 per cent struggle with a mental illness, such as clinical anxiety, child abuse, post-traumatic stress disorder, depression or active psychoses. Cocaine has been the drug of choice in Ottawa for at least two decades, Mr. Boyd says. The drug is expensive in its purest form, but it's often mixed with chemicals to create a rock. And those rocks, known as crack, sometimes go for as little as $3. The high lasts for about 15 minutes, which means users must re-dose many times throughout the day. By comparison, Mr. Boyd says the high from a drug such as heroin can last up to six hours. Mr. Boyd has worked at Oasis for almost five years. He says the time he spends in the needle exchange is a rewarding part of the job. "Most of the time we're trying to manage resources or negotiate with clients about what it is we can offer, whereas this is such a pure customer service interaction," he says. "There are very few opportunities in this field to exactly meet the needs of clients as they are presenting them." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin