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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Closures Of Needle Exchanges Spark Fears
Title:New Zealand: Closures Of Needle Exchanges Spark Fears
Published On:2001-09-21
Source:New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 07:58:27
CLOSURES OF NEEDLE EXCHANGES SPARK FEARS

Needle exchange workers fear a surge of hepatitis C among illegal-drug
users with the imminent closure of two exchanges.

And the national Needle Exchange Programme says it cannot rule out more
closures.

The trust which runs exchanges in Palmerston North and Napier says it will
be forced to close them on October 10 because of insufficient Government money.

"If people don't exchange needles and use them only once every time, the
rate of hepatitis C and risk of HIV will increase," programme national
co-ordinator Simon Nimmo said yesterday.

His views were echoed by Palmerston North exchange manager Kelvin Richardson.

Mr Nimmo said users from Hawkes Bay to Horowhenua and Wanganui would still
be able to buy needles and syringes from participating pharmacies and
return them after use.

But only 30 per cent of the more than one million needles dispensed
nationwide through the programme annually went through pharmacies. The rest
went through the 13 needle exchanges.

Mr Nimmo said older users would probably go to the pharmacies in Palmerston
North and Napier but the younger ones would probably "share and reuse their
needles".

Users who obtained needles from pharmacies were also far less likely to
return them. This created health risks for the public because many used
needles ended up in public rubbish bins.

Around half of the programme's drug users have hepatitis C, but less than
0.5 per cent are HIV positive.

Mr Nimmo said it was "quite possible" that other needle exchanges could
close because of underfunding. Nationally, they received $2.2 million a
year of taxpayer money, but needed $4.5 million.

The health ministry had rejected a proposal from his organisation to rescue
the closing services. The ministry is paying $172,000 a year to the trust,
but twice that sum was needed, he said.

Dr Don Matheson, the ministry's Deputy Director-General, public health,
said the ministry was trying to find a new provider for the services.

The ministry wanted the two closing exchanges to continue using volunteer
workers, Mr Richardson said, but he considered it unsafe for volunteers to
give out health information on which people's lives depended.

The Palmerston North police said that drug-related crime would only worsen
when the city's needle exchange closed.
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