Source: Anchorage Daily News (AK) Contact: http://www.adn.com/ Copyright: 1998 The Anchorage Daily News Author: Peter Jenkins Pubdate: Sun, 25 Oct 1998 NEEDLE EXCHANGE WORTHWHILE I am puzzled by one of the latest examples of Republican budget-saving actions. They have annihilated funds for needle exchange programs. These programs have shown to be effective in reducing HIV infections Although the death rate from HIV is down, the infection rate remains constant at about 40,000 new cases a year. The new drug treatments are extremely expensive, and lifetime treatment costs for one person can easily reach $1 million. If the outlay of $1,000 in a needle exchange program results in only one person not getting the disease it is a 1,000 percent return on investment. Find me a money manager who would turn this down. The money for treatment of HIV usually comes from either government- or insurance-funded programs. The only money the government has comes from you and me. Insurance companies get their money from premiums, which if paid by a business are added to the price of its goods or services, which we then pay, or if paid by an individual, increases that person's cost of living. The so-called cost-cutting measure then, in hidden ways, costs us all far more in the long run. Maybe someone from our esteemed congressional delegation can explain the logic of this situation. On second thought, I think it would take a person with the convoluted irrational reasoning of John Lindauer to do justice to it. - - Peter Jenkins - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake