Needle exchanges may be difficult for some people to accept, but they are better than outbreaks of hepatitis and HIV or accidental injury from discarded needles, officials in Kentucky counties that have established the exchanges told Bill Estep of the Lexington Herald-Leader.
"Programs allowing intravenous drug users to exchange dirty syringes for clean ones are spreading in Kentucky as communities confront growing heroin abuse and concerns over the potential for disease outbreaks caused by addicts sharing needles," Estep reports. "So far, health departments and local governments in 13 counties have approved needle exchanges, and 11 are in operation, according to the state Cabinet for Health and Family Services and local officials."
Kentucky leads the nation in hepatitis C cases and has 54 of the 220 counties that the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers most at risk for HIV or hepatitis outbreaks from shared needles, based on "statistics such as numbers of overdose deaths, per capita income, unemployment and sales of painkillers," Estep notes. "Kentucky had 18 counties that the CDC calculated to be more vulnerable than Scott County, Indiana, to a disease outbreak among IV drug users, with Wolfe County considered at greatest risk in the nation."
Some local officials "said they’ve faced concerns that giving needles to drug users enables or condones illegal drug activity, or will make the local drug problem worse," Estep reports. Republican Judge-Executive Mike Malone of Carter County "said he shared those concerns when officials from the health department brought up the idea. Malone said he changed his mind because of the potential for the program to head off disease and get addicts into treatment.
“It’s not about enabling them to take drugs. It’s about stopping the spread of disease,” Malone said. “The more you learn about it, the more you’ll understand it’s the right thing to do.”
"Programs allowing intravenous drug users to exchange dirty syringes for clean ones are spreading in Kentucky as communities confront growing heroin abuse and concerns over the potential for disease outbreaks caused by addicts sharing needles," Estep reports. "So far, health departments and local governments in 13 counties have approved needle exchanges, and 11 are in operation, according to the state Cabinet for Health and Family Services and local officials."
Kentucky leads the nation in hepatitis C cases and has 54 of the 220 counties that the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers most at risk for HIV or hepatitis outbreaks from shared needles, based on "statistics such as numbers of overdose deaths, per capita income, unemployment and sales of painkillers," Estep notes. "Kentucky had 18 counties that the CDC calculated to be more vulnerable than Scott County, Indiana, to a disease outbreak among IV drug users, with Wolfe County considered at greatest risk in the nation."
A version of this map appeared on Kentucky Health News May 5. This one adds needle-exchange sites. |
“It’s not about enabling them to take drugs. It’s about stopping the spread of disease,” Malone said. “The more you learn about it, the more you’ll understand it’s the right thing to do.”
from Kentucky Health News http://ift.tt/2alCVCC Needle exchanges slowly spread as locals realize they're better than HIV and hepatitis outbreaks, injuries from discarded syringesHealthy Care
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