Pubdate: Fri 03 Oct 1997 Source: Vancouver Sun Contact: Section: B1 / Front Author: Marina Jimenez Overdose death underlines downtown heroin problem: Frank Cromarty was one of 600 HIVpositive drug addicts cared for by just two nurses. By: Marina Jimenez AIDS would likely have killed Frank Cromarty in the end, but his other disease claimed him first. Last Wednesday afternoon he died of a heroin overdose in a rooming house on the Downtown Eastside. Usually his old friend Kathy Churchill one of two nurses with the Vancouver Native Health Society's HIVAIDS outreach program would take him out for coffee on welfare days and sit with him until his craving subsided. But Churchill was away that day. So Cromarty who'd been clean for several days headed out the door in frustration, looking for a fix. His brother Fred also an HIVpositive injectiondrug user bought heroin with the money from his monthly welfare cheque. ``There is no doubt in my mind that if I had been there, he wouldn't have been dead today,'' says Churchill, beginning to weep. ``He spent last Christmas with my husband and me.'' Churchill and one other nurse serve the 600 HIVpositive, injectiondrug addicts who are registered with the program. Cromarty's death and the deaths this week of five other HIVpositive injectiondrug users in the Downtown Eastside illustrate that existing resources have failed to stop the AIDS epidemic that grips the city. According to the B.C. Centre for Disease Control, the infection rate among injectiondrug users is about 20 per cent a year the highest incidence in the developed world. Last week the Vancouver/Richmond health board called the problem a ``publichealth emergency''. Close to half the addicts who frequent the Downtown Eastside estimated at 6,00010,000 are believed to be infected with HIV. The province has given the Vancouver/Richmond health board $3 million to spend on the problem. Advocates working in the trenches say the money is welcome, but comes too late. They say they have been warning public health officials about the impending crisis for years and want an inquiry to determine why they didn't respond adequately to the epidemic before now. The needleexchange program, which began in 1988, had to fight for support and at one point had to pull a van off the road because of a lack of funding. There are just 42 detoxification beds available now in Vancouver. The Pender DeTox Centre closed two years ago and hasn't been replaced. Programs in the Downtown Eastside receive about $1.1 million of the province's total $7million AIDS budget. Most of that $750,000 goes to the needleexchange program. There is only one program in the Downtown Eastside offering counselling and medical support to HIVpositive injectiondrug users. ``If we had more people to do counselling and the social workers necessary to keep people on the straight and narrow, then we could do a better job stemming the epidemic,'' says Lou Demerais, executive director of the Vancouver Native Health Society. Thirtyone people on his client list of 600 have died so far this year of HIVrelated illnesses and/or drug overdoses. Demerais' support program receives $150,000 in provincial funding. And the client list is growing exponentially; so far this year, 153 HIVpositive injectiondrug users signed up for help. Clients often crowd into the dropin centre on East Hastings and join a line of dozens who are waiting to see the two nurses. Many leave in frustration. Typically, the clients are a very needy group of people who often have low selfesteem and a history of abuse, says Churchill. Cromarty, for example, was an alcoholic, grew up in foster homes and was sexually abused. ``We don't have the resources to counsel them, or get them into detox programs or find them proper housing, and those missing pieces in the continuum of care really matter,'' said Demerais, who would like to hire six more nurses and have extended hours. Turvey adds: ``If addicts are sitting in the street gutter in despair, they're not going to be persuaded not to share needles. People say, why shouldn't I?'' Studies show proper housing would also help stem the epidemic. Now, many injectiondrug users live in the 7,400 single rooms in the Downtown Eastside, most of which are not selfcontained. ``That leads to people congregating outside, going to back alleys to shoot up,'' said Frank Gilbert, with the Downtown Eastside Residents Association. Gilbert says better housing wouldn't eliminate drug use, but would lead to safer shooting practices such as the use of clean needles. Moffatt Clarke, director of the Provincial AIDS Strategy, agrees the government hasn't done enough. Part of the problem is the lack of coordination among the ministries responsible for the different elements of the AIDS epidemic: health; aboriginal affairs; municipal housing; education; children and family services. ``The problem is the government is so big and the problem is so multisectoral with many social components,'' said Clarke, who is working to put a strategy in place by next March to better coordinate a speedier, more consistent response. In the meantime, Churchill says simply: ``We're just losing a lot of people.''