Pubdate: Sat, 03 Jul 1999 Source: Illawarra Mercury (Australia) Copyright: Illawarra Newspapers Contact: http://mercury.illnews.com.au/ Page: W4 Author: Lisa Sewell Note: Appeared in Weekender insert NEEDLE EXCHANGE CLAIMS SUCCESS Needle exchange centres, like the proposed shooting galleries, were not welcomed with open arms by the community. Needle and syringe programs, however, have operated successfully within the Illawarra and South Coast for more than 11 years. The programs, initiated by the Illawarra Area Health Service through its Drug and Alcohol HIV/AIDS Service, provide clean injecting equipment to more than 1400 Illawarra and South Coast drug users each month. Along with the equipment, the centre's staff hand out a variety of educational materials, act as a referral service to other programs, and provide a friendly face to a group that is often snubbed by society. The head office for the service is at Rawson St, Wollongong, and from there eight subsidiary services are run throughout the Illawarra and South Coast, predominantly in community health centres. The centre's acting service manager Alan Wright said the centre had multiple aims. ``The first aim of the service is HIV/AIDS prevention within this community group (drug users), and by supplying people with clean injecting equipment we are able to keep the number of infections in the area to a minimum,'' he said. ``We are also here to provide information and educational material and also act as a referral service - on most days we refer people to crisis accommodation or a suitable medical health organisation. ``We work under the banner of harm reduction and use evidence-based best practice strategies at all times.'' Mr Wright said although there had been some opposition, the service had integrated into the community with few complications. ``The centre was set up with consultation with surrounding businesses and through close working partnerships we've managed to build good relationships with those neighbouring businesses,'' he said. ``In fact much of the success of the program is due to the collaborative partnerships we have formed with local businesses, councils, police, youth groups and health services.'' Ideally, Mr Wright said, users would bring back their used needles for safe disposal - although the service would pick up and deliver syringes. However, on occasions when members of the community came across used syringes, he urged them to contact the centre. ``We are very responsive to the community's needs and concerns regarding the needle and syringe program and are more than happy to talk to people about issues, such as unsafe disposal.'' Mr Wright said that the sheer numbers using the centre emphasised the need for such a service. ``When the service first started we had 10 clients, the service is now used by about 1400 return clients per month throughout the Illawarra and South Coast. The increase in figures shows the service works,'' he said. ``I would not like to think of what would happen without the service, but I feel that if drug users don't have access to clean injecting equipment or safe sex paraphernalia it would be detrimental to the area's community health. ``Our clients are just people in the grips of a terrible addiction, and they need the services and resources that centres like ours can provide.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea