Pubdate: Wed, 08 Dec 1999 Source: Fresno Bee, The (CA) Copyright: 1999 The Fresno Bee Contact: http://www.fresnobee.com/man/opinion/letters.html Website: http://www.fresnobee.com/ Forum: http://www.fresnobee.com/man/projects/webforums/opinion.html Author: Marc Lasher Note: Marc Lasher is medical director of Fresno Free Clinic. FRESNO-AREA NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAM VITAL IN CURBING SPREAD OF DISEASES On the edge of Roeding Park in May 1998, Audrey Alloro and Bobby Bowens of the San Joaquin Valley Ex-change Works were being cited for a misdemeanor as they exchanged sterile syringes for used ones to injection drug users from the trunk of their car. My car was backed up within 5 feet of theirs. I was dispensing medical care from the hatchback of my car (the birth of the Fresno Free Clinic) as part of the community project of my residency in Family Practice/Community Health at University of California, San Francisco-Fresno/University Medical Center. Concerned about my welfare, I was joined by a former board member of Valley Medical Center to observe this arrest. We watched Audrey and Bobby get arrested for providing appropriate and recommended medical care to an "at-need" and "high risk" population. Touching many So how does this war on drugs in Roeding Park come home to us? It beats down our doors when a family member tells us of a date rape, a youthful indiscretion or just poor judgment with at-risk behavior. Specifically, these include unprotected sex, using the same straw for intranasal cocaine use or sharing injection equipment. Approximately 50% of new HIV infections occur among injection drug users, their sexual partners and offspring. We all have a vested interest in lessening the suffering of individuals, the spread of communicable diseases and the staggering costs for treating each new additional person with AIDS. The lifetime cost of treating a person with AIDS is well over $189,000. Preventing only six cases of AIDS saves all of us more than $1 million to use on so many other needed services. Scientific study after study points directly to syringe exchanges making major reductions in injection drug users becoming infected with HIV. Injection drug users in New York City using syringe exchanges were two-thirds less likely to become HIV positive. This was repeated in Tacoma and New Haven for HIV, hepatitis B and C. In 1977, a Baltimore study showed decreases in improperly discarded syringes. Reductions in law enforcement and corrections expenditures are projected because of increased referrals for medical and drug treatment. Dr. Peter Lurie's classic UCSF/Centers for Disease Control study says there is "no evidence that needle exchange programs increase the amount of drug use by its clients or change overall community levels of non-injection and injection drug use." Eight other government studies conclude the same. No reports contradict this finding. Every major scientific/medical organization supports the use of syringe exchange programs to reduce the spread of infectious diseases including: National Academy of Sciences, American Medical Association, American Academy of Family Physicians, National Institute of Health (NIH) Consensus Panel, as well as the U.S. surgeon general. The National Commission on AIDS says, "Legal sanctions on injection equipment do not reduce illicit drug use, but they do increase the sharing of injection equipment and hence the spread of AIDS." The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and NIH advise health care workers to counsel those who are unable to stop injecting drugs to "use a new, sterile syringe to prepare and inject drugs" and practice safe injection technique. Here at home the Fresno-Madera Medical Society recently approved a motion in support of syringe exchange for the Fresno area. Assembly Bill 136 allows local governments the authority to declare health emergencies and designate agents to exchange sterile syringes without being charged with criminal violations. Currently, four cities in California have declared health emergencies and operate syringe exchange programs. Much-needed action Our Board of Supervisors needs to act by allowing the volunteers of the local, 5-year-old needle exchange to continue their important health outreach of saving lives and stopping the spread of these deadly diseases in our own back yard. This medical issue needs to be taken out of the criminal jurisdiction and placed into the arena of community health. The clear message needs to be given out in a medical model that injection drug use is dangerous and risky, and if you can't stop then at least you need to use sterile syringes to lessen harm to oneself and others. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D