Pubdate: Sun, 12 Aug 2007
Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB)
Copyright: 2007 The Edmonton Journal
Contact:  http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134
Author: Andrea Sands
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

USED NEEDLE SCARE FOR CITY FATHER

He'll Be Tested For HIV, Hepatitis After Stepping On Piece Of Discarded Syringe

EDMONTON - In the past year, Nicholas Hermansen has complained 
repeatedly to police and health officials that drug users are 
littering his Boyle McCauley neighbourhood with discarded needles.

Now the 34-year-old electrician and father of two needs a series of 
blood tests for hepatitis and HIV after he stepped on a broken needle 
tip in his back yard about a week ago.

"Every time you think about it, your stomach gets butterflies. You 
just have to be logical and think about the fact that the chance of 
catching something is very, very remote," he said Saturday.

Hermansen had returned home from work Aug. 3 when he stepped out his 
back door in his socks to go to his garage. As he walked across a 
concrete pad, Hermansen felt something poke his foot.

"I didn't think anything of it and then an hour later I went to have 
my bath and pulled it out of my heel."

The thin, blackened needle tip was only about an inch long. It 
appeared to be old. Hermansen immediately called Capital Health's 
link line, where a nurse put him in touch with the health authority's 
needle stick program.

"Obviously, there's a problem if you need a whole program for people 
accidentally stuck with needles," Hermansen said.

Hermansen went to the Royal Alexandra Hospital that night for blood 
tests. The negative results were faxed to the Eastwood Health Centre 
the next day, where he received a booster for an earlier hepatitis B 
vaccination along with a tetanus shot.

"I have to go back for more tests after three months and after six 
months to see if there was anything on the syringe, to see if I 
contracted anything."

The dad of two girls, ages four and 22 months, moved his family into 
their house on 106A Avenue near 95th Street a year ago. Hermansen 
said he sees discarded needles lying around his neighbourhood about 
once a week.

"The house beside me was two years in being built, and in the interim 
people were going in there and shooting up and doing God knows what 
else, so I assume that's where it came from."

He has already told his kids never to touch needles, but he is 
worried for other young families moving into the area.

Hermansen thinks a needle-exchange program that hands out and 
collects syringes for injection drug users is only making matters worse.

The Boyle McCauley Health Centre, at 10628 96 St., is one of five 
fixed sites for the Streetworks program that runs the needle exchange.

"They say it's a needle exchange, but obviously there's something 
wrong with the math or the equation or there's another source (for 
needles) they're not talking about because they end up on the 
streets," Hermansen said.

Dr. Gerry Predy, medical officer of health for Capital Health, said 
the Streetworks program sometimes collects more needles than it hands 
out, but users of illicit drugs get needles from other sources. Predy 
said Streetworks educates people about proper needle disposal and 
provides several safe-disposal boxes around the inner city to keep 
needles off the street.

"It's a way of having better control over the discarding of needles," 
he said. "But like other forms of litter, some of them get discarded 
in ways that are not appropriate.

"It's an issue I don't think is caused by the needle exchange program."

Streetworks manager Marliss Taylor said the program distributed about 
680,000 needles last year within about a 25-block area in the inner city.

Instead of handing out needles to drug users, health officials should 
set up a safe-injection site where users are supervised while they 
shoot up so needles never make it out the door, Hermansen said.

"They can hope someone throws a needle out (safely) all they want, 
but they can't guarantee it."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom