Pubdate: Tue, 24 Mar 2015 Source: New Haven Register (CT) Copyright: 2015 New Haven Register Contact: http://www.nhregister.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/292 Author: Paul Hammer NEEDLE-EXCHANGE PROGRAM WAS DANIELS' 'GREATEST GIFT' Several years ago at a public forum, I found myself sitting in front of Mayor John Daniels. I took the opportunity to ask him what he thought was the greatest legacy of his administration. He responded that community policing would have been his greatest legacy but that the city had all but abandoned it. Fortunately this approach to law enforcement has since been restored. Mayor Daniels said that the city's needle-exchange program had been his greatest single gift to the city. This program, which he had first opposed and ultimately embraced, was shown by a landmark Yale Public Health study to have reduced new AIDS infections in New Haven (80 percent of which were transmitted by hypodermic needles) by a third. The level of trust created by not being subject to arrest by participating also provided an opportunity for health professionals to refer addicts to drug rehabilitation programs that they might otherwise not have known about or been open to considering. The Yale study was cited by many advocates and officials around the country in making the case for instituting similar programs in their states and cities. So, while the New Haven program was not the first, it may have been the most influential. I'm sure Mayor Daniels was proud of New Haven's pioneering role, but his real pride lay in stemming an epidemic and saving lives in the city he loved, redefining the war on drugs so it was no longer a war against its victims. - Paul Hammer, New Haven - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom