Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jun 2010 Source: Alberni Valley Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Alberni Valley Times Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouverisland/albernivalleytimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4043 Author: Shayne Morrow CRACK KITS PART OF VIHA DRIVE Council members received crack pipes as part of a harm reduction presentation by the Vancouver Island Health Authority on Monday afternoon. "Harm reduction does not promote drug use." That was the message delivered by VIHA medical health officer Dr. Lorna Medd, despite some skepticism from councillors. Addiction is not simply about making an unwise choice," Medd said. "Addiction is about people trying to self-manage their pain." Medd outlined a number of measures being undertaken to reduce the spread of disease related to street drug use, with the most controversial being the crack kits VIHA plans to distribute in the community. Currently, about 5% of street drug users are HIV positive, with annual health costs per person as high as $200,000, Medd said. "If we are focussed, we may be able to prevent that number from rising, through harm reduction," she said. Even worse, 72% of drug users carry the hepatitis C virus, as a result of sharing needles and crack pipes. VIHA already distributes syringes, vials, condoms and lubricant in order to prevent the spread of disease related to intravenous drug use and drug-related prostitution. Medd said the rise in crack use has made the new kits a priority. "In 1996, crack accounted for about 5% of illicit drug use. Now, it's up between 45 and 50%," Medd said. VIHA maintains a methadone program to help intravenous drug users transition away from heroin. But that program has slipped in priority due to the shift to crack cocaine. "For crack, there is no treatment - there is no methadone," she said. The kits contain a glass pipe, a brass filter to screen out impurities, a wooden push stick (actually half of a disposable chopstick set) and a flexible mouthpiece. Medd said the kits can prevent the transmission of disease. But perhaps more importantly, she said, they provide a window for marginalized drug users to initiate a relationship with the health care system, and, possibly, seek treatment. "It's not about forcing people into abstinence, although it's certainly in that direction," Medd said. "But the goal is ultimately to prevent users from doing further harm to themselves." Examining her sample kit, Coun. Cindy Solda questioned how the kits actually help. "Do people re-use them? Do they recycle them?" she asked Gordon Cote, executive director of NARSF, the Nanaimo-based agency that runs the needle exchange program. "The one thing we're hoping to do is reduce sharing," Cote said. "What we've discovered is that 38% of drug users have reported sharing crack pipes or needles." Councillors Hira Chopra and Ike Patterson both questioned the data, admittedly sketchy, according to Medd, on the question of whether harm reduction actually facilitates drug use. "What we know is that the people who are accessing harm reduction are already in that life," Medd said, adding that one of the hopes is to reduce the risk to those on the periphery of the drug culture. "I know that safe sex measures have been a great benefit in reducing the spread of disease, but I'm still a little skeptical about this program," Solda said following the meeting. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D