Pubdate: Sun, 04 Dec 2016 Source: Blade, The (Toledo, OH) Copyright: 2017 The Blade Contact: http://www.toledoblade.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/48 Author: Lauren Lindstrom LUCAS COUNTY PREPS NEEDLE EXCHANGE Health officials in Lucas County are working to get the area's first needle exchange program up and running by the spring. Health officials in Lucas County are working to get the area's first needle exchange program up and running by the spring, adding another weapon to their arsenal in the fight against the heroin and opioid epidemic. Toledo will be the last large metro area in Ohio to adopt such an exchange. Cleveland, Columbus, and Cincinnati all have them, as do the smaller cities of Dayton and Portsmouth. Such programs aim to decrease the likelihood of spreading HIV or hepatitis C among users who share needles. The Lucas Syringe Access Program will operate at two locations: St. Paul's United Methodist Church in UpTown and the Talbot Center in East Toledo. It's a one-for-one exchange program that also will offer medical screenings, the overdose-reversal medication naloxone, and other resources. The goal of such programs is to meet drug users where they are, and provide resources to mitigate the damage of their drug use and steer them toward treatment if they are ready. "The main thing for us is to meet face-to-face with drug users, test them for HIV and hepatitis C, give them naloxone," said Jerry Kerr, HIV prevention coordinator at the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department. "We're really excited to be doing what we can to help people move into treatment. As difficult as it can be, that will be one of our main goals." In July, the health board voted unanimously in support of starting such a program. Mr. Kerr said the delay in starting one was not because of lack of interest from county health officials, but rather lack of funding. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that in 2015, 6 percent of HIV diagnoses in the United States were attributed to injection drug use. Nationwide, the number of HIV diagnoses linked to injection drug use is falling. More than half of injection drug users in the United States used a syringe services program in 2015, according to the CDC. Mr. Kerr said the local health department works with the Lucas County Coroner's Office to test the blood of people who have died of opioid overdoses. In an 11-month period in 2015 and 2016, 42 percent of those blood samples were positive for hepatitis C, Mr. Kerr said. None tested positive for HIV, indicating that at this time, HIV is not being transmitted among injection drug users in Lucas County. That doesn't mean it can't happen here. Mr. Kerr points to outbreaks in Scott County, Indiana, and Shelby County, Ohio, where health officials in each community recently responded to an HIV outbreak crisis. In 2015, health officials diagnosed the first of nearly 200 HIV cases spread by sharing needles in the rural Indiana county. In Shelby, a much smaller, though similarly concerning outbreak resulted in a handful of HIV and hepatitis C diagnoses among injection drug users who admitted to sharing needles. He's hoping the local program is another safeguard against a similar public health emergency here. In Lucas County, nearly all new HIV cases are transmitted through sexual contact and the number of new cases has fluctuated over the last decade. More recently, the number of new diagnoses was 56 in 2011; 64 in 2012; 39 in 2013; 54 in 2014; 32 in 2015, and 45 through Oct. 31 of this year. In the exchange's first year, health officials could swap between 50,000 and 80,000 syringes and see 720 individuals, Mr. Kerr said. Those figures are based on estimates for the number of intravenous drug users in Lucas County, which some health officials have pegged at 2,400. "People I talk to in substance abuse treatment centers say that is much too low," Mr. Kerr said, meaning the program might surpass its projected numbers. Participants will agree to some rules upon joining the program. "People who show up at one of the program sites will sign an agreement not to sell drugs on the property and discuss their rights to be treated with respect," Mr. Kerr said. Health care officials can do basic exams to check patients' injection sites for abscesses or other signs of infection. Participants will get an identification card with a unique number - though no names or photographs - which identifies them as a member of the Lucas Syringe Access Program. This, Mr. Kerr said, identifies them to law enforcement and, thanks to provisions in state law, exempts them from Ohio's drug paraphernalia laws within 1,000 feet of a program location. Toledo police spokesman Lt. Joe Heffernan said the department will abide by the laws related to the program and will participate in discussions with organizers as program details are finalized. St. Paul's church member Kathie King, who sits on a committee to develop the program, said it was an easy decision to make the church one of the sites, given the congregation's long history of working with people in need. She said participants in the exchange program can also use the time to visit the Marketplace for All People, a food and clothing shelter the church opened in August. "Where we've seen successful needle exchange programs is in places where there are other services," she said. It also destigmatizes the visit, "so they don't have a sign on their forehead that says 'I'm getting needles.' " With the resources available, Lucas County's will be "a well-funded" syringe exchange program, Mr. Kerr said. The program, operated through the Toledo-Lucas County Health Department, is receiving funding from the University of Toledo Medical Center and Lucas County Mental Health and Recovery Services Board. UTMC, the former Medical College of Ohio Hospital, has committed up to $160,000 per year; the mental health board will contribute $20,000 for supplies, Mr. Kerr said. Scott Sylak, executive director of the Mental Health and Recovery Services Board, said he sees the syringe exchange as one facet of a larger strategy in the effort to provide education, prevention, and treatment in the heroin epidemic. "Folks that are considering coming in to treatment, they are in varying stages of contemplation," he said. "We want to be able to provide this first point of contact and give them some information to create an easy pathway for them to do that and enter treatment." Toledo's program comes after changes to Ohio law in 2015 to allow "bloodborne infectious disease prevention programs" without declaring a state of emergency. The Free Medical Clinic of Greater Cleveland has been operating Ohio's oldest needle-exchange program since 1995, created through a health emergency declared by then-Cleveland Mayor Michael R. White. That designation, in response to the area's growing HIV rate, gave the city the ability to run the program despite state laws. Other cities followed suit. Columbus started an exchange program in early 2016, the first created under the new state law. - --- MAP posted-by: