Pubdate: Fri, 29 Jun 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Section: Section A; Pg 22; Column 6; Editorial Desk Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298 Authors: Susan Ziony, Logan Spector, Robert S. Broadhead, Diana L. Sylvestre, M.D. NEEDLE EXCHANGES, AGAINST THE ODDS To the Editor: Re "Needle-Trading Programs Have Few Inroads in U.S." (news article, June 23): While we are dismayed by the laws and attitudes that hinder this pragmatic response to the problem of H.I.V. transmission, we're pleased that there is, at least, a debate. Underground needle exchanges are less effective than legal ones because of the threat of arrest and a diminished ability to raise money. Hence we find it ironic that even as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention affirms the utility of needle exchange programs, in its home city of Atlanta neither the press nor the politicians are talking about making them legal. Susan Ziony Logan Spector Atlanta, June 25, 2001 The writers are, respectively, president and vice president, Atlanta Harm Reduction Center To the Editor: "Needle-Trading Programs Have Few Inroads in U.S." (news article, June 23) effectively portrays the sources of local resistance to needle exchange programs: baseless claims and demagoguery pitted against the mass of scientific evidence on the effectiveness of exchange programs in combating H.I.V. and related diseases without increasing rates of drug abuse. Such resistance led to the closing of a state-sponsored needle exchange in Windham, Conn. A scientific study that a team of us has conducted since 1994, based on follow-up interviews with hundreds of drug injectors in the Windham area, found that contrary to the outlandish claims of the program's opponents, closing the needle exchange produced no reductions in the robustness of Windham's drug scene. It resulted only in significant increases in drug injectors' H.I.V. risk behaviors, especially reusing and sharing dirty syringes, and in obtaining new syringes from unsafe sources. Robert S. Broadhead Storrs, Conn., June 24, 2001 Professor of sociology, University of Connecticut To the Editor: Another area in which needle exchange (news article, June 23) appears to making an impact is a reduction in the spread of hepatitis C. Approximately 60 percent of new cases of hepatitis C are attributed to injection drug use. Because the infection is spread very efficiently by blood, hepatitis C has traditionally been acquired rapidly in this population. A pattern of rapid early acquisition has been replaced by a much more gradual increase, probably due in part to the promotion and distribution of sterile injection equipment by needle exchange programs. Such programs should also be credited with aggressive educational practices that provide this high-risk population with the information they need to prevent disease transmission. Until a vaccine becomes available, needle exchange programs will be central to the containment of this epidemic. Diana L. Sylvestre, M.D. San Francisco, June 24, 2001 Clinical assistant professor of medicine, University of California, San Francisco - --- MAP posted-by: Beth