Pubdate: Sat, 08 May 1999 Source: Gold Coast Bulletin (Australia) Website: http://www.gcbulletin.com.au/ Address: 385 Nerang Road, Molendinar, Qld 4214 Copyright: Gold Coast Publications Pty. Ltd Fax: +61 7 5539 3950 Contact: 27 Author: Ed Southorn DOCTOR HITS MOBILE VAN FOR ADDICTS A MOBILE free 'clean needles' van for drug addicts on the Gold Coast will attract drug dealers 'like flies to rotting meat', says the State Government's regional medical officer. Dr John Carlyle also said yesterday that drug addicts needed to be detained and treated - not given free needles from the back of 'Mr Whippy vans'. He said a 12-month needle van trial by the Gold Coast AIDS Association and Injections Newsline (GAIN) could entice people to start using heroin. Dr Carlyle said free needle programs like the GAIN van trial had been set up to stop the spread of AIDS, but highly infectious hepatitis C, which was spread by intravenous drug users and could lead to cirrhosis and liver cancer, was a major infectious disease problem. The city council's co-ordination committee yesterday recommended not to support the GAIN van trial, backing a motion from Southport councillor Dawn Crichlow who said the State Government should listen to the council's message and stop giving out free needles from the GAIN van immediately. "How any government can finance illegal activities like heroin injection is beyond me," said Cr Crichlow. GAIN president Jonathon Davis said the needles van trial had been authorised by the State Government and 'we don't need council support, they don't have legal power over us'. Mr Davis said the trial would continue. "I haven't seen one dealer anywhere near our van... but we will help prosecute anyone caught dealing," he said. The GAIN van had operated on the Coast at night for almost four months. Dr Carlyle said research showed needle users of less than three years had a 34 per cent chance of contracting hepatitis C, 75 per cent after three years and 90 per cent after seven years. "It doesn't matter if they are clean or dirty needles," said Dr Carlyle. This was because 47 per cent of clean needles were exchanged among friends and 42 per cent among sexual partners. Dr Carlyic said evidence from the Coast showed free needle programs encouraged dealers to collect clean needles and set up 'shooting houses'. He also noted the risk to the community and said council workers would have to be indemnified by WorkCover. Dr Carlyle spoke out strongly against free needle vans with a NSW retired police inspector, Graham Ross, at yesterday's co-ordination committee meeting. Mr Ross, who worked with drug addicts in Kings Cross, said needle vans in Sydney attracted violent addicts. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea