Pubdate: Tue, 23 Mar 1999 Source: Ottawa Citizen (Canada) Copyright: 1999 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAM HELPS ADDICTS, STUDY SAYS VANCOUVER (CP) - The controversy over whether giving injection drug users fresh needles increases HIV transmission rates is expected to heat up again Tuesday with publication of a study co-authored by Vancouver AIDS experts. The study in the British-based AIDS journal attempts to contradict the views that needle exchange programs (NEP) attract addicts who then share dirty needles, driving up the infection rate. "I dont know if it will add fuel to the fire in this controversy," study co-author Dr. Martin Schechter, a University of B.C. epidemiologist, said Monday. "Rather, it should take the wind out of the sails of people who have misinterpreted our previously published studies. "What weve been able to show in this study is that people who frequently attend NEPs are higher risk," he said. "It is what youd hope for and what youd expect and thats why they come to NEP and why they have higher HIV rates." A previous study found that 32 per cent of frequent needle exchange program users are HIV positive compared with 14 per cent of infrequent users. Schecter said the U.S. Congress has used those figures to veto funding of needle exchanges. Vancouvers needle exchange program, introduced 10 years ago, is one of the busiest in North America, doling out more than two million needles a year from fixed sites and mobile units. In spite of the offer of clean needles, the prevalence of HIV among Vancouvers injection drug users is estimated at 28 to 40 per cent. Critics, including civic politicians and neighborhood advocates, have argued that the program must be either ineffective or harmful. In the study published Tuesday of 694 drug users, subjects were enticed with $20 payments for each study visit, up to four in total. In the drug users who used the program frequently relative to those who didnt, there was a clear pattern of greater risk, including being younger, spending more time living on the street and being more commonly involved in the sex trade. Another sign of their risk patterns is answers to questions where they reported meeting their needle-sharing partners: through other users, on the street, in jail, in shooting galleries, through methadone clinics, family members or the needle exchange program, in that descending order. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck