Pubdate: Mon, 1 Mar 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Darren Gray MAKE NEEDLES EASIER TO OBTAIN: EXPERTS Intravenous drug users should be able to buy needles and syringes from suburban convenience stores and petrol stations, leading Australian drug researchers say. The needles and syringes should be sold only in proper packaging along with information sheets on their disposal and they should not be sold to children, the researchers say. Needle exchange programs were urgently needed in prisons and youth training centres, and safe injecting rooms were necessary to combat Australia's hepatitis C epidemic, the researchers wrote in the latest Medical Journal of Australia. Public health authorities should also consider promoting strategies such as smoking illicit drugs rather than intravenous drug use. ``Hepatitis C prevalence is now so high that even very occasional sharing of needles and syringes carries an extreme risk of HCV infection,'' the researchers warned. It is estimated that about 65per cent of intravenous drug users have hepatitis C. Fewer than 3per cent are estimated to have HIV. The researchers, from the Centre for Harm Reduction at the MacFarlane Burnet Centre for Medical Research and the National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research, said it was not only needles and syringes that left intravenous drug users at risk of blood-borne viruses. Contaminated equipment such as swabs, spoons, water vials and tourniquets, as well as body parts and other surfaces, also posed a risk to intravenous drug users. Although needle sharing among intravenous drug users appears to have decreased in recent years, the researchers say minority groups such as prisoners and Vietnamese migrants are more likely to share needles. They called for urgent special programs to support Aboriginal intravenous drug users and those from non-English-speaking backgrounds. The director of the Centre for Harm Reduction, Dr Nick Crofts, said clean needles and syringes should also be made available in police cells. Needles and syringes should only be sold at convenience stores in proper packaging along with information sheets on their disposal. He said they should not be sold to children. Hepatitis C presented a major public health challenge to Australia because it had been around for years gaining strength before it was discovered in 1988, Dr Crofts said. The battle against hepatitis C would therefore require a greater effort than the battle against HIV, he said. It is believed about 190,000 Australians have hepatitis C, with about 145,000 of them thought to be chronically infected. In 1997, there were about 11,000 new hepatitis C infections. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck