Pubdate: Sun, 21 Nov 2010 Source: Morning Star, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 The Morning Star Contact: http://www.vernonmorningstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1352 Author: Jennifer Smith Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) STUDENT NURSES HOPE TO PROVOKE CHANGE Emily Allingham would like to see more health care dollars spent on crack pipe mouth pieces. Samantha Brown believes safe needle exchange is a health care service. And Megan Cox doesn't believe in lost causes, she believes in harm reduction. With these thought-provoking messages, the three young UBC Okanagan student nurses are trying to catch the attention of the public. Sporting T-shirts with attention-grabbing slogans, the girls will set up at the Village Green Mall throughout the day Wednesday, Dec. 1. "It's kind of provoking and we want people to come up and ask us why," said 22-year-old Cox. Allingham, 21, adds: "We want people who disagree with us." Being a conservative community, the trio says Vernon tends to frown upon and discourage many harm-reduction efforts "" like safe injection sites. "We want to enlighten some people," said 24-year-old Brown. The student nurses hope to educate the public on how the sometimes controversial harm-reduction efforts play a large role in helping the community as a whole. "The whole idea of enabling a drug addict, it just reduces the harm they were going to be doing to themselves anyway," said Cox. While Vernon doesn't have a safe injection site like Vancouver, it does offer other controversial programs - free needle exchange/vein maintenance, free condoms and lube and other services through the Cammy LaFleur Street Nurse Outreach. The outreach program offers confidentiality/privacy/non-judgemental/education on harm reduction strategies. The trio is striving to increase awareness and acceptability around such services, in hopes that it will lead to continued services through community support and funding of programs like the outreach program. "It keeps the whole community safer," said Brown. The nursing students explain that such services strive to treat and prevent health issues for its clientele. For example, offering safe needle exchange (as well as vaccines for hepatitis and testing, counselling and information for HIV, sexually transmitted infections and hepatitis) can prevent further spread of disease. In turn, the services decrease health care costs. "Hepatitis C is on the rise in Vernon. So that has ramifications for everybody in the community," said Brown, who is eyeing a career working within the surgical department. Allingham wants to see more health care dollars spent on crack pipe filters mouth pieces. Instead, she says, millions of health care dollars are spent on treating lung infections and other ramifications from those who smoke from less than ideal crack pipes. "It's almost unnecessary costs," said Allingham, who is looking forward to a career on the medical floor, working with patients. Along with educating the public, the young women are hoping to gather signatures in support of harm reduction. Their petition of signatures will be forwarded to politicians and the outreach clinic. Cox, who is keen for a future in the ER, hopes it will help ensure there is always a place for services like the outreach program. "Just in case anyone tries to take away the funding," said Cox. The nurses have also set up a page on Facebook - Harm Reduction in Canada - with videos and information. To date, approximately 130 people "like" the group, and the students encourage other Facebook users to look them up and "like" them too. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake