HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Sacramento Approves Syringe Sales Without Prescriptions
Pubdate: Wed, 06 Sep 2006
Source: Sacramento Bee (CA)
Copyright: 2006 The Sacramento Bee
Contact:  http://www.sacbee.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376
Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area.
Author: Eric Stern, Bee Staff Writer
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

SACRAMENTO APPROVES SYRINGE SALES WITHOUT PRESCRIPTIONS

Nearly a year after a countywide plan failed, the Sacramento City 
Council on Tuesday authorized pharmacies -- within city limits -- to 
sell up to 10 syringes without a prescription.

"Hepatitis C and HIV are on the rise in Sacramento, and we can take a 
public stand and create a program to combat the spread of disease and 
save lives," said Councilman Ray Tretheway, after the council adopted 
the needle plan.

The council approved the measure on a 6-2 vote, over objections from 
law enforcement officials and council members Sandy Sheedy and Robbie 
Waters that drug users would discard even more needles. Mayor Heather 
Fargo was absent, although she supported the measure in an earlier vote.

Community activist Steve Hansen said pharmacies can provide a safe, 
non-intimidating environment for intravenous drug users to buy new, 
sterile syringes.

"Pharmacies are really a front line in public health, regardless of 
whether you're talking about clean needles or the flu," he said.

But Waters expressed reservations after the council meeting about 
drug users walking into a pharmacy and leaving needles on store shelves.

"When these guys need a fix, nothing stands in their way," he said.

"Numerous needles are found weekly in our city parks, and that 
concerns me," Waters added.

"I'm concerned about the safety issue of some child ... stepping on 
that dirty needle when they're walking through the park."

Sheedy is pushing another measure that would create a needle-exchange program.

The city's needle-sales program could be implemented in about six to 
eight weeks. In a bureaucratic twist, the county will oversee it, 
even though county supervisors rejected a similar needle-sales plan in October.

Because the city merged its health department into the county's in 
1957, the county health officer also serves as the city health officer.

"I will administer the program the way I am required by law to do 
so," said county Health Officer Glennah Trochet, who has been a 
strong supporter of the idea.

The county health department estimates that there are 15,000 daily 
intravenous drug users in the county.

Those users have a 90 percent chance of acquiring hepatitis C within 
one year because of used and shared syringes.

Use of contaminated syringes also is linked to 19 percent of all AIDS 
cases in California, according to the California Department of Health Services.

"Anything that increases access to clean needles for that population 
will decrease the spread of these diseases," Trochet said.

The county's role will be to register pharmacies in the city that 
participate in the needle-sales program.

Pharmacies will be required to provide the needle purchaser with 
written information or verbal counseling about access to drug 
treatment, testing for disease and safe disposal of needles.

The pharmacies also will be required to provide a disposal site for 
used needles.

In 2004, the Legislature passed a law allowing pharmacies to sell 10 
needles without a prescription to adults, but the practice first has 
to be approved by the local government where the pharmacy is located.

As the county supervisors debated the issue last year, city councils 
in Rancho Cordova, Galt, Elk Grove and Folsom all voted to oppose 
needle sales without a prescription.

The county ultimately rejected the idea on a 3-2 vote, while 16 other 
counties in California have approved syringe sales, including Yolo, 
Yuba and Solano.

BACKGROUND A 2004 California law allows pharmacies to sell 10 needles 
without a prescription to adults, but requires that their local 
governments approve the practice first.

City councils in Rancho Cordova, Galt, Elk Grove and Folsom all have 
voted to oppose needle sales without a prescription.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom