Pubdate: Fri, 13 Feb 2009 Source: Morning Star, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 The Morning Star Contact: http://www.vernonmorningstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1352 Author: The Cammy LeFleur Street Nurse Outreach Program QUESTIONS ANSWERED Joel van der Molen recently wrote about the activities of Vernon's street nurse, raising some questions likely shared by many residents of the North Okanagan regarding drug use and needle exchange in our area. We would like to take this time to answer some of his questions. Needle exchange is indeed an important part of the Street nurse's activities. The Needle Exchange Program (NEP) exists to reduce harm to the general public as well as those who use IV drugs. It is a common misconception that giving a clean needle to a drug-addicted person will enable that person to use drugs. A study from Ksobiech in 2004 found that NEPs do not encourage the initiation of intravenous drug use, increase duration of drug use or increase frequency of drug use. To put it simply: a drug-addicted person will use drugs. The aim of the NEP is to reduce harm to the user and the community in general until the user is able to stop using drugs. NEPs discourage needle sharing and therefore prevent the spread of blood-born diseases such as Hepatitis and HIV. Studies have found that IV drug users with access to a NEP are two to six times less likely to risk HIV infection than users without access to such a program. The average cost to the Canadian health care system of caring for a person infected with HIV is over $150,000 throughout their lifetime. NEPs save the public hundreds of thousands, if not millions of dollars in health care costs. The needle exchange program in Vernon takes in 66,000 needles a year and gives out 60,000. The math is simple: we take in more needles off the street than we give out. Needles come from other sources and are taken off the streets by our program. The program effectively reduces harm to the entire community. Mr. van der Molen began his letter with the mention of a former drug addict who had turned her life around. Vernon is full of stories such as these because of the NEP, which is often the first point of contact drug users have with health and social services. The Street Nurse Outreach Program connects drugs users to resources such as counseling and rehabilitation services needed to turn their lives around. The NEP isn't akin to giving an alcoholic a gift card to the liquor store, as Mr. van der Molen suggested. Someone with drugs and a dirty needle can still shoot up. What the NEP gives people is a chance to make one good decision today, so that maybe tomorrow they can make another. And maybe one day they can turn their life around, too. The Cammy LeFleur Street Nurse Outreach Program - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin