Pubdate: Sat, 26 Feb 2000
Source: Irish Times, The (Ireland)
Copyright: 2000 The Irish Times
Contact:  11-15 D'Olier St, Dublin 2, Ireland
Fax: + 353 1 671 9407
Website: http://www.ireland.com/
Author: Andre Lyder

DRUG ADDICTION PROGRAMMES

Sir - It could be concluded from the report by Kitty Holland (February 22nd)
on the Merchants Quay Project's evaluation of their needle exchange
programme that the efficacy of such programmes in reducing the transmission
of blood-borne viruses is well established. This is far from the case.

With regard to the Hepatitis-C virus, there is no scientific study which
clearly identifies needle exchange programmes as impacting in any
significant way on Hep-C rates among injecting drug users. Prevalence rates
have remained consistently high across the EU over time (they currently
range from 50 to 90 per cent), irrespective of the level of needle provision
introduced. In the Netherlands, according to the European Monitoring
Committee for Drugs and Drug Addiction, the Hepatitis-C prevalence rate in
injecting drug users is well over 70 per cent.

A recent external evaluation of the Eastern Health Board Drugs Service was
extremely critical of the lack of needle exchange provision in Dublin,
describing the service as "patchy and not very comprehensive", and it called
for the establishment of a "network of needle exchange facilities". This
call was made despite the conclusion of its own literature review of the
issue that, "research evaluation literature on the specific impact of
syringe exchange schemes is mixed".

What is really interesting, however, is that, despite this "patchy and not
very comprehensive" service, the HIV prevalence rate among injecting drug
users in Ireland is 0.9 per cent according to the European Monitoring
Committee for Drugs and Drug Addiction. In France, where syringes have been
readily available from pharmacies, as the Merchants Quay Project is
recommending for Ireland, since 1987 the HIV prevalence rate among injecting
drug users is between 15.5 and 18.3 per cent. In the Netherlands, the doyen
of "harm reductionists" the world over, the prevalence rate is apparently
between 20 and 26 per cent.

The high incidence of HIV among crack cocaine users (generally smoked) in
the US indicates that there many aspects of an addict's behaviour which
makes them susceptible to bloodborne infections. This, coupled with the fact
that risk of infection in injecting drug users cumulates with use (the
longer the injecting career the greater the risk), would suggest that
greater attempts to tackle the problem of addiction may produce better
results in reducing the spread of bloodborne viruses than facilitating
self-destructive, and indeed illegal, behaviour.

Yours, etc.,

Andre Lyder,
Coalition Of Communities Against Drugs,
Cork Street,
Dublin 8.
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