Pubdate: Wed, 26 Dec 2007
Source: Penticton Western (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 Penticton Western
Contact:  http://www.pentictonwesternnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1310

INTERIOR HEALTH CONSIDERS PROVIDING CRACK PIPE KITS

Interior Health is looking into the possibility of distributing "crack
kits" to help prevent the spread of disease.

But it could be some time yet before people on the streets get
them.

The kits, supplied by the provincial government through the Harm
Reduction Supply Services Committee, are really just pieces of rubber
tubing which go on the end of crack pipes, that drug users routinely
share.

The committee, which includes representatives from each of the
province's health authorities, as well as the ministry of health,
decided this fall to make the kits available to any health authority
that wants them.

"At Interior Health we haven't made any decision about if or how we
would distribute them or use them," said IH's senior medical health
officer Andrew Larder.

The province has given health authorities a year to decide whether to
take and distribute the kits to drug users.

"So what we will be doing in the new year is beginning a process of
trying to determine where it would be appropriate to use them," said
Larder, "and that process is clearly going to involve discussion with
the service organizations.

"It will clearly involve consultation with the law enforcement
agencies," he said, and "it will clearly involve consultation with the
community."

Larder said researchers have known for years that using crack puts
someone at higher risk of testing positive for hepatitis B or C and is
associated with the spread of tuberculosis.

A recent study found live hep C virus on the ends of crack
pipes

"So we've known that using crack, presumably through these pipes, is a
risk factor for the transmission for a number of infectious diseases,"
said Larder.

"The people who are using the pipes often have sores and burns around
their lips ...

"And the pipes get contaminated with saliva, with dirty fluid and then
they share the pipes."

He added that distributing the rubber bits is a harm reduction
strategy which has been successfully used in Vancouver's Downtown
Eastside for years. Their use has been shown to reduce the spread of
communicable diseases.

However, for the harm reduction strategy to work, there has to be
buy-in from the community at large.

"We need to spend the time it takes to get everybody's support and
comfort with moving into this harm reduction strategy," said Larder.

"There is no timeline. If it takes us six months, it takes us six
months.

"If it take us three months, it takes us three months. We'll do the
work we need to do to get the support."
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MAP posted-by: Derek