Pubdate: Tue, 17 Dec 1991
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Copyright: 1991 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact:  http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388
Author: Sabin Russell
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

S.F. READY FOR NEEDLE EXCHANGE

Health Department Says State Law Must Change

San Francisco could set up an effective needle exchange program within 
months to prevent AIDS among drug addicts if state laws were changed to 
make such a program legal, a city health department study has concluded.

A draft report of a city plan to prevent the spread of AIDS among drug 
users proposes a $500,000 program that would allow drug addicts to exchange 
dirty hypodermic needles for clean ones.

"The San Francisco Department of Public Health has in place the mechanism 
to start a needle exchange program with very little delay," said the 
report, a copy of which was obtained by The Chronicle.

According to the report, the city could immediately set up a program that 
would send teams of needle swappers to sites frequented by drug addicts. 
Within four months, the city could also have in place a storefront center 
that could swap needles and provide counseling service referrals. A mobile 
van also would be used to bring the service to neighborhoods where there is 
high risk of infection.

The report said the program can only begin when state law is changed to 
permit it. Mayor-elect Frank 
(http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/jo.html)Jordan, however, 
said he wants a city-run needle exchange program even if the law has not 
been changed. Press secretary Josh Newman said Jordan, now vacationing in 
Hawaii, has not seen a copy of the report.

Included in the $500,000 price of the Health Department plan is an AIDS 
testing service for addicts, nursing support and $200,000 to cover the cost 
of evaluating its effectiveness.

The report also concludes that a system offering drug treatment "on demand" 
is the most effective strategy for reducing AIDS among drug users, but 
acknowledges that the $30 million cost of such a program is "not 
attainable" at this time.

In place of such a service, the report recommends restructuring existing 
treatment programs to serve more people with available money and to seek $4 
million in federal money to expand such programs. The plan proposes a 
computerized reservation system to handle the backlog for treatment services.

Sharing of contaminated needles is a major source in the transmission of 
HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. There are an estimated 16,000 addicts in 
San Francisco who inject drugs, primarily cocaine and heroin. About 15 
percent, or 2,400, are believed to be infected with HIV. Since the start of 
the epidemic, drug users have accounted for 1,369 or 12 percent of AIDS cases.

State law currently forbids the distribution of clean needles to drug 
addicts, but San Francisco has supported a clandestine needle exchange 
program that has distributed more than 250,000 syringes in the past year. 
While San Francisco is prohibited by law from paying for needle exchanges, 
it does provide cotton balls, alcohol wipes, bleach, and needle disposal 
containers to Prevention Point, a volunteer organization that distributes 
needles.