HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Battling Prison Disease
Pubdate: Thu, 04 Mar 2010
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2010 Times Colonist
Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html
Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Judith Lavoie

BATTLING PRISON DISEASE

Two Women Try To Keep Prisoners Safe As They Seek Risky  Relief From
Misery

Drugs find their way into prisons, despite all efforts  to plug supply
lines. And for many inmates, the most  dangerous part of life inside
is sharing jury-rigged  needles.

Lack of knowledge, misery and addictions combine in a  sometimes
lethal mix, but Canadian prisons do not  permit distribution of clean
needles -- meaning health  risks soar for an already at-risk population.

However, in Greater Victoria facilities -- William Head  Prison,
Victoria Youth Custody Services Centre and  Vancouver Island Regional
Correctional Centre -- a  two-woman team is fighting disease with education.

"People are advocating for a needle exchange in  prisons, but in the
meantime, we are offering six-week  courses," said Erin Gibson,
manager of harm-reduction  services for AIDS Vancouver Island, who
teaches the  course with health promotions educator Sara Gifford.

In addition to HIV and hepatitis C prevention, the  sessions deal with
topics such as getting tested,  living a healthy lifestyle after
diagnosis, preventing  sexually transmitted diseases, tuberculosis and
  problems resulting from steroid use.

The wretchedness of prison life can lead to people  taking risks, such
as sharing needles made out of  ballpoint pens or using needles so
blunt they rip off  chunks of skin, according to Under The Skin, a new
  report by the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, which  gives chilling
descriptions of diseases spread by  makeshift needles.

"Life is so desperate in prison that, even if they

didn't use until they got there, they start using to  forget," Gifford
said.

"People get to the point that they're willing to take  risks," added
Gibson.

Much of the information involves basic safety, such as  ensuring
anything that goes in your body during  tattooing has not touched
someone else's body.

"And we identify risks," Gibson said, "whether it's  smoking crack,
having sex or not sharing nail clippers  or razors because of hep C."

Gibson and Gifford know those who take the course are a  conduit to
the larger prison population, so they hand  out armfuls of literature.
"We've got guys that come  and want to take the information because
there's new  young people on the unit and they don't have that
information," Gibson said.

"HIV and hep C are preventable inside and outside, and  people don't
deserve to contract these diseases."

The philosophy behind the course is that everyone  deserves access to
information that will keep them  healthy and that more than 90 per
cent of those in  prison will get out, so it makes more sense to
prevent  diseases than wait until they spread to family and  community
members.

Similar courses are run at some Canadian prisons, but  they are unique
internationally, according to AIDS  Vancouver Island,

However, more than 60 prisons worldwide, in Europe,  Asia and the
Middle East, have needle-exchange  programs, says the HIV-AIDS Legal
Network report. In  those prisons, there is no evidence needles are
used as  weapons or that drug use or overdoses increase, it  says.

The report says rates of HIV and hep C in prison are 10  to 20 times
higher than in the regular population.

The network was to take its plea for prison needle  exchanges before a
Commons committee earlier this year,  but was bumped off the agenda
when parliament was  prorogued. The group is seeking a new date but
faces  opposition from some Conservative MPs, who say  sanctioning
illegal drug use is not the right way to  tackle drugs in prison.

Figures from the Correctional Service of Canada  estimate at least 11
per cent of prisoners inject  drugs, and the Canadian Medical
Association has  recommended to government that CSC develop and
evaluate  at least one pilot needle and syringe program in  prison.

Meanwhile, Gibson and Gifford hope their classes will  inspire healthy
behaviour. "They may not have a lot of  control over their lives, but
at least we can talk  about what health means for them," Gibson said. 
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