Pubdate: Thu, 06 Aug 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Michael Gerson Note: Michael Gerson is a research fellow at the Institute for Global Engagement and columnist for the Washington Post. He is a former speechwriter and advisor to U.S. President George W. Bush. NEEDLE EXCHANGE GIVES ADDICTS TIME TO CHANGE The RV arrived at a corner near Washington's Marvin Gaye Park, known locally as "Needle Park." A steady procession of addicts came to the door, mounted a few steps and sat down. One by one, they dropped used needles into a container and received new needles in return, along with alcohol wipes and the small, bottle cap-like "cookers" in which heroin is heated. Reggie Jackson, Teefari Mallory and Hazel Smith -- staff members at PreventionWorks!, Washington's largest needle exchange program -- are at the park twice a week, offering clean needles to prevent disease transmission, condoms, drug treatment referrals, AIDS testing and a few kind words: "You still play the guitar?" "Love you baby." It is the eyes and arms of addicts that draw your attention. Eyes that are glassy, unnaturally bright or tired beyond exhaustion. Arms that are ulcerated sticks or purple parchment; with repeated use, needles become blunt and tear the skin. Some addicts adopt a defensive politeness -- "yes, sir" -- and quickly leave. Others want to talk -- "I love plants and I love kids" - -- trying to provide hints of their humanity. They are America's least wanted. They are also at the centre of a controversy. Needle exchange programs have always been controversial, with opponents arguing they send a mixed moral message about drug use. The U.S. House of Representatives recently passed an amendment banning exchanges in the District of Columbia within 300 metres of sites where children gather -- which, if approved by the Senate, would effectively put programs like Prevention-Works! out of business: Staffers joke they could only work in graveyards or the middle of the Potomac. This might make sense if needle exchange programs increased the number of addicts. But they don't. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health, has reviewed the studies on needle exchange. "It does not," he says, "result in an increase in drug abuse, and it does decrease the incidence of HIV . . . The idea kids are going to walk out of school and start using drugs because clean needles are available is ridiculous." My experience in Washington was consistent with Fauci's view. Addicts who came for needles were generally older. Clean needles no more caused their addiction than the provision of clean shot glasses would cause alcoholism. The main purpose of needle exchange, according to Reggie, the supervisor of the mobile unit, is to keep people alive until they can get clean, something that can take years. Needle-sharing is the third-leading cause of HIV infection in Washington. It is also a major contributor to the spread of hepatitis C, the main cause of liver transplants in the U.S. Reggie is well acquainted with these facts because, while an addict, he contracted both diseases. "If they had a truck like this in the '60s, '70s and '80s," he told me, "maybe I wouldn't have gotten infected." The staff of PreventionWorks! builds long-term relationships with people no one else knows by name. Because of this, they have a good feel for when addicts are ready for treatment. While I was in the RV, Reggie signed up two addicts for detox. Teefari used her own car to drive one addict, with whom she had been working for eight years, to treatment. "He's ready, ready to go," she said, fighting tears. Critics say needle programs create a moral hazard by legitimizing drug abuse. But it does not legitimate drug abuse to help addicts avoid deadly diseases until they are ready for help. Instead, sacrificing their lives to send an "unmixed" moral message sends a troubling moral message: The unwanted have no worth. Street addicts are connected to the rest of us by only a few invisible strands -- people such as Hazel, Reggie and Teefari. Those strands should not be severed. Michael Gerson is a research fellow at the Institute for Global Engagement and columnist for the Washington Post. He is a former speechwriter and advisor to U.S. President George W. Bush. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart