Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Pubdate: Wed, 30 Sep 1998 Author: Jenny Booth Home Affairs Correspondent PRISON DRUG PROBLEM MAY BE DRIVING HEPATITIS EPIDEMIC SCOTTISH prisons may be fuelling the country's hepatitis epidemic, a drugs expert has warned. Dr Laurence Gruer, addictions co-ordinator at Greater Glasgow Health Board, says Glenochil prison - where 19 inmates contracted HIV and 15 were infected with hepatitis B in 1993 - and other jails could be accelerating the spread of hepatitis strains across Scotland. Dr Gruer was commenting on a new survey which shows continued dangerous levels of needle-sharing among drug injectors in Scottish jails. The Scottish Prison Service was not doing enough to tackle the very high number of inmates who continue or even start to take drugs behind bars, he said. "Prisons certainly could act as a driver for new hepatitis B epidemics. Hepatitis B can more readily be transmitted sexually, and also from mother to baby. "So there is more risk of prisons acting as a driver for its spread in the wider community. It is also fair to say that prisons would certainly be contributing to the spread of hepatitis C. "I am sure that the SPS isn't doing enough to provide education and drugs services. It isn't because of lack of recognition of the problem, it's just not seen as an urgent priority." But the SPS denied that it was being complacent, and announced it was about to start a pilot project at Greenock prison offering all new inmates vaccination against hepatitis B. Michael Mulford, a prisons service spokesman, said: "The proposition that using dirty needles in prison is fuelling a hepatitis outbreak in jails and beyond has no hard scientific evidence to back it." Dr Gruer spoke after the publication of the 'Third Scottish Prison Survey', for which 4,780 inmates were questioned. The survey shows that more than 650 prisoners admit to taking heroin behind bars in the last six months, with 237 injecting the drug. Nearly 200 shared needles and syringes making it almost inevitable that they will infect each other with hepatitis C, a virus shared by an estimated 70-80 per cent of Scottish drug injectors. Injectors are also at high risk of contracting the less lethal hepatitis B - a disease that they may sexually transmit to their partners in the wider community. The risk of contracting HIV is lower, as prisons now provide needle sterilisation tablets. Hepatitis is ten times more infectious than HIV. At Glenochil, Inverness and Low Moss prisons and the National Induction Centre at Shotts, all drug injectors are sharing needles. "It is, I think, concerning that in Glenochil 100 per cent of injectors ate sharing works [needles and syringes], as Glenochil was the place where in 1993 there was the first fully documented HIV epidemic in a prison anywhere in the world," Dr Gruer said. "The problem with prison is that there is evidence that some people will start injecting in prison, with nothing better to do. "The chances of contracting hepatitis C in prison if you have never injected before are very, very high indeed. "Works are likely to be shared with lots of people anyway, and there is no adequate way of cleaning syringes that get pretty ancient and rusty. Viruses can hang around in the nooks and crannies of these old needles." Dave Liddell, the director of the Scottish Drugs Forum, said the prison survey figures on needle-sharing were a big cause for concern. "What we saw in Glenochil before was the very rapid spread of HIV among a group that shared injecting equipment. Hep C is much more virulent than HIV and the risks are very much greater. "It may be that given the level of sharing in prison, prison plays quite a strong part in the level of infection in Scotland." The inmates most anxious to inject heroin were those who were suffering serious withdrawal symptoms - particularly from NHS methadone. Both Dr Gruer and Mr Liddell said the survey results made it urgent for more prison doctors to consider continuing methadone prescriptions to drug addicts who have been receiving it in the community. Glenochil does prescribe methadone, but most inmates serving short sentences are offered little or no help, a fact that has contributed to a number of suicides. "The absence of methadone prescribing is another major, major gap in the prison approach to drugs, which they are very slowly coming around to recognising," said Dr Gruer. The one policy that would prevent the spread of hepatitis - providing sterile needles and syringes in exchange for dirty ones - has been ruled out because of the risk of infected needles and syringes being used as weapons. The prison survey showed that the drug users admitting to taking heroin behind bars has risen from 9 per cent in 1994 to 31 per cent this year. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski