Pubdate: Wed, 01 Sep 1999 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 1999 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.uniontrib.com/ Forum: http://www.uniontrib.com/cgi-bin/WebX NO TO NEEDLE EXCHANGES A bill sought by the city of Los Angeles to allow local governments to hand out clean hypodermic needles to illegal drug users in a bid to combat AIDS has reached Gov. Gray Davis' desk. If he takes seriously California's obligation to counter drug abuse, the governor will veto this ill-considered legislation. Introduced by Assemblywoman Kerry Mazzoni, D-San Rafael, the measure would repeal a state law that generally prohibits the possession of hypodermic needles without a doctor's prescription. Instead, the bill would encourage cities and counties to provide free needles to injection drug users, on the premise that the distribution of clean paraphernalia would slow the spread of AIDS. Considering the billions of dollars spent by all levels of government to discourage illicit drug use, this bill is a monument to hypocrisy. It essentially declares that, in glaring contravention of its own war on drugs, the government will abet narcotics consumption of the most dangerous kind. It sends the disastrous message to young people that shooting up heroin or cocaine or any other drug is OK, just so long as it is done with a clean, government-issued needle. Proponents, including many public health professionals, cite a growing body of studies conducted by the National Academy of Sciences and others concluding that needle exchanges deter the spread of infectious diseases without encouraging higher levels of illegal drug use. That may be true, but it misses the larger point, which is that government has a responsibility that extends well beyond a single category of drug abusers. It encompasses the entire corroding culture of substance abuse in America. Needle exchanges undermine the paramount goal of eradicating substance abuse in all its manifestations. That is why Gen. Barry McCaffrey, the federal government's anti-drug czar, campaigns vigorously against needle exchanges. He and other critics point to the experience in Vancouver, British Columbia, which has the largest and oldest exchange program in North America, dispensing 2.5 million needles a year. Vancouver also has become the heroin capital of the continent, with the highest death rate from overdoses. In 1988, when the needle exchange was initiated, 18 people in Vancouver died of overdoses. Last year, the number topped 600. Moreover, the highest rates of property crime in Vancouver are within two blocks of the needle exchange program. Significantly, 40 percent of intravenous drug users who participated in the Vancouver program reported using dirty needles anyway during the previous six months. This helps explain why the percentage of Vancouver participants who were HIV positive skyrocketed from 2 percent in 1988 to 30 percent a decade later. The sensible way for government to counter narcotics abuse and AIDS simultaneously is through treatment on demand, coupled with aggressive education and community outreach programs targeted on intravenous drug users. This certainly is not the cheapest way to address the problem, but it is the only way to avert the enormous pitfalls of Mazzoni's bill. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto