Pubdate: Wed, 23 Jul 2008
Source: Prince Albert Daily Herald (CN SN)
Copyright: 2008 Prince Albert Daily Herald
Contact:  http://www.paherald.sk.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1918
Author: Matthew Gauk

NEEDLE EXCHANGE PROGRAMS SOUGHT FOR FEDERAL PRISONS

National HIV/AIDS groups are calling for needle  exchanges to be
piloted in Canada's prison system.

This comes even as the provincial government has  ordered an extensive
review of Saskatchewan's needle  exchange programs.

"We disproportionately incarcerate people who use  drugs," said
Richard Elliott, executive director of the  Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal
Network, a Toronto-based  organization that advocates on behalf of
those infected  with the virus.

"Drugs are getting into prisons notwithstanding  everything we do to
keep them out ... People are  shooting up in prisons and they aren't
doing it with  the proper equipment."

Prison populations are about 10 times more likely than  the public to
be infected with the HIV virus and 20  times more likely to be
infected with hepatitis C,  Elliott said.

A report by the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse  indicates that
estimates of HIV prevalence among male  prisoners range from one to
four per cent, and one to  10 per cent among female prisoners. They
also write  that estimates for hepatitis C infection among  prisoners
are 28 to 40 per cent.

Elliott believes that needle exchanges - where one  clean needle is
handed out for every used or "dirty"  needle that's handed in - would
lower these high rates  of infection considerably.

"(Federal prisons) need it because it makes public  health sense,
human rights sense and fiscal sense,  too," Elliott said.

It costs about $30,000 a year to treat an HIV-positive
prisoner.

Prisoner health is part of public health, Elliot said.  Most prisoners
do eventually go back to their  communities and whatever diseases they
acquired while  incarcerated go home with them.

"It seems to me this is not public policy-making based  on evidence,
here," he said.

Jeff Campbell, regional director for Correctional  Service Canada,
refused to comment on the issue except  to say that no prisons in his
jurisdiction have needle  exchange programs.

However, the Public Health Agency of Canada has written  that: "The
availability of sterile injection equipment  has been shown to
substantially reduce the transmission  of blood-borne pathogens in
areas where needle exchange  programs (NEPs) are used ... in selected
prison  settings."

In the same report, opposition to needle exchanges by  Correctional
Service Canada was attributed to general  safety concerns and the
belief that needle exchanges  would send a contradictory message about
drug use  within the prison system.

The political side of the issue is "dead in the water,"  according to
Elliot. The federal government was testing  out a "safe tattoo"
program in 2005 and 2006 but it was  axed by Public Safety Minister
Stockwell Day. No moves  have been made to implement needle exchanges.

"I think we can have this debate," said Trevor Gray,  youth and
outreach education co-ordinator at the  Prisoners HIV/AIDS Support
Action Network. "People are  not going to stop taking drugs, but can
we at least  allow them to have the tools they need?"

The federal government is responsible for the medical  care of inmates
in its penitentiaries. Prisoners should  have access to the same
health care as other Canadians,  Gray said. Needle exchanges have been
in place in  Canada for 20 years, he pointed out, sometimes funded  by
the government itself.

Federal prisons already make condoms available to  prisoners as well
as bleach to clean inmates' homemade  injection rigs. But it takes a
lot of work to clean one  of these rigs and prisoners who are
injecting drugs are  often doing it as quickly and secretly as
possible in  order to avoid getting caught, according to Elliott.

He said the rigs, which are often made by attaching a  sharp end and
plunger to a ballpoint pen barrel, are  more likely to create larger
wounds with more blood  smeared and a higher chance for infection.
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MAP posted-by: dan