Pubdate: Wed, 14 Apr 2010
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2010 The Vancouver Sun
Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Dustin Walker, Canwest News Service

SPIKE IN HEPATITIS C CASES RAISES HIV FEARS

Health officials hope providing clean needles and crack pipes to 
addicts will reduce an expected spike in the number of central 
Vancouver Island residents who contract HIV.

A relatively high number of people suffering with hepatitis C in the 
region could be a sign that a surge in HIV is on its way, said Dr. 
Lorna Medd, medical health officer with the Vancouver Island Health Authority.

Central Vancouver Island's HIV rate was at 4.9 cases per 100,000 in 
2008, well below the provincial rate of 7.9, according to BC Centre 
for Disease Control statistics. But the region has among the highest 
rates of hepatitis C in the province at 87.6. The B.C. rate was just 
55.8 in 2008.

VIHA has said it plans on having sterile needles and other drug 
paraphernalia available at front-line health care centres. About 12 
sites in Nanaimo have been shortlisted, but final selections won't be 
made until sometime this summer.

"The HIV rates tend to follow the Hep C rates," said Medd. "We think 
we're in a window, and if we're able to get in with good harm 
reduction support and safety supplies, we could prevent some cases of HIV."

Other social service providers are glad VIHA is looking at further 
harm reduction strategies, but say more education and other supports 
are needed to best tackle such problems. Both HIV and hepatitis C, a 
virus that attacks the liver, can be spread by sharing needles and 
crack-cocaine pipes.

Medd said that past experiences with areas such as Vancouver's 
drug-riddled Downtown Eastside have shown health officials that when 
hepatitis C cases are up, HIV cases are usually not far behind. 
Often, there is a two-to-three-year lag before the two statistics stabilize.

"This is fairly new information that we have just gotten, so we don't 
know how long the disparity has existed between Hep C infection rate, 
and the HIV infection rate," said Medd, adding that the south and 
north island areas aren't seeing the same disparity in HIV and 
hepatitis C cases.

"We know that harm reduction works and it does prevent those cases. 
We're trying to work it through in a way that fits in the community."

Dennis Ano, a health nurse at Tillicum Haus Native Friendship Centre 
in Nanaimo, agrees that harm reduction strategies are effective but 
stressed that more education is needed.

"A lot of people assume that the only way they can get it [HIV] is 
through sharing of needles," he said. Crack users can also spread 
disease by sharing their pipes, since smoking the drug can result in 
cracked lips that can bleed.

"Nobody's invincible. It's out there and people need to be aware of it."

Gord Cote, director for NARSF Programs, which delivers harm reduction 
programs, said truly addressing the spread of communicable diseases 
goes beyond providing clean pipes and needles.

"It's a broader community health context for prevention and housing 
is a critical factor for that," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart