Pubdate: Tue, 21 Dec 1999 Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA) Copyright: 1999 San Francisco Chronicle Contact: http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/ Forum: http://www.sfgate.com/conferences/ NEEDLE EXCHANGE OK LIKELY San Mateo County Could Take First Steps San Mateo could become the latest Bay Area county to support needle-exchange programs if the Board of Supervisors declares hepatitis C and HIV public health emergencies today. The proposal, which comes on the heels of a state law that decriminalizes needle exchange programs, would help reduce and prevent the spread of both blood-borne diseases among intravenous drug abusers, county officials said yesterday. Alameda, Marin and Contra Costa counties, as well as the cities of Oakland, San Francisco and Berkeley have declared hepatitis C and HIV public health emergencies. Santa Clara County has declared HIV a public health emergency and soon may add hepatitis C to the list, according to the county's health officer. ``Once you acknowledge something exists, I feel responsible for doing something about it,'' said Supervisor Rose Jacobs Gibson, who requested the emergency declaration. ``It's our way of being sure that we try to do as much as we can to resolve this as best we can.'' Earlier this month, the board authorized $200,000 for health officials to test people at high risk for contracting hepatitis C after a county health study determined that cases of infection were on the rise, particularly among minorities and young people. About 13,000 county residents are infected with the disease, which enters the body through direct blood exposure. Nearly 2,000 people are infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, said Dr. Scott Morrow, the county's health officer. The county health department believes that between 17 and 23 percent of HIV infections are transmitted through injection drug use, he said. ``We don't have those figures for hepatitis C,'' Morrow said. ``But we do know from national studies that about 60 percent of new infections are caused by injection drug use. The rest are through sexual transmission and other routes.'' For Joey Tranchina, a community AIDS activist and needle-exchange advocate, the county's declaration would be long overdue. Tranchina, executive director of the AIDS Prevention Action Network, started passing out needles ``underground'' in 1989. Two years later, he and another AIDS activist, Camille Anacabe, gained widespread media attention after they were arrested for swapping needles outside a Redwood City methadone clinic. The case went to trial, but ended in a mistrial when the jury deadlocked 11 to 1 for acquittal. The San Mateo County district attorney's office decided against a retrial, and Tranchina has delivered fresh supplies to intravenous drug abusers since then. ``It's certainly about time,'' said Tranchina, who has financed his program through donations from United Way and the Peninsula Community Foundation. ``I think that it's going to be an interesting new phase, and I hope it will lead to us being able to do a lot more.'' As a longtime hepatitis C survivor, Luther Brock said the county's acknowledgment of the problem is a step in the right direction. Brock, a member of the San Mateo County Hepatitis C Task Force and an outreach worker for the nonprofit AIDS Community Research Consortium, is a former intravenous drug abuser. ``I would like to see it, specifically because the rate of infection for hepatitis C is at least four times greater than the rate of infection for HIV,'' said Brock, who has lived with the disease for 27 years. ``It won't make more addicts, but it will reduce the harm to other people. A lot of substance abusers don't think that it will happen to anyone but them.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk