Fixing Needle Exchanges without Demonizing People with Addiction

The Kanawha-Charleston Health Department’s needle exchange program has reduced disease and helped people with addiction find treatment.

But first responders and Charleston Mayor Danny Jones are upset at the proliferation of needles and people with addiction coming to their city.

On this Front Porch podcast, we debate how to protect first responders, the general public and the health of people with addiction — all without increasing the stigma people with addiction already face.

Also, host Scott Finn will be trading the green, rolling hills of West Virginia for the mean streets of Vermont. Rick Wilson will give some tips on how to survive…the maple-tree jungle.

Welcome to “The Front Porch,” where we tackle the tough issues facing Appalachia the same way you talk with your friends on the porch.

Hosts include WVPB Executive Director and recovering reporter Scott Finn; economist Jessi Troyan of the free-market Cardinal Institute; and liberal columnist and avid goat herder Rick Wilson, who works for the American Friends Service Committee.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available at wvpublic.org and as a podcast as well.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by the Pulitzer Prize-winning Charleston Gazette-Mail. Find the latest news, traffic and weather on its CGM App. Download it in your app store, and check out its website: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

Needle Exchange Program Won't Come to West Virginia Town

Local outcry has scuttled plans to bring a needle exchange program to a West Virginia town.

News outlets report that Kanawha County Communities That Care spokesman Scott Burton said at a Monday night public meeting in Rand that communities that don’t want the harm reduction program won’t get it.

More than 100 people turned up at the Rand Community Center to hear from Kanawha-Charleston Health Department officials about the possible mobile program. Dozens of residents expressed their opposition through apparel and public comment, and the Community Association of Rand declined to take a vote on the health department’s proposal.

The opposition comes on the heels of an effort to end a similar program in Charleston, where the mayor says dirty needles have ended up on playgrounds and in public parks.

Rural Risk: Fighting Disease Amid The Opioid Crisis

Health officials in the Ohio Valley are investigating outbreaks of disease associated with needle drug use in what is emerging as a new public health threat from the region’s profound opioid addiction crisis. 

In northern Kentucky the health department is tracking a cluster of 43 recent HIV cases, about half of which are related to needle drug use. In West Virginia, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention just released a report on 40 new HIV cases diagnosed in 2017 in 15 mostly rural counties. 

When CDC researchers looked for the country’s places most at risk for outbreaks of needle-borne diseases such as HIV and Hepatitis C, they found them in Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia. The 2016 analysis found nearly a hundred counties in the Ohio Valley at high risk. 

Credit Alexandra Kanik/Ohio Valley ReSource
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Health officials say the stigma associated with HIV can add to that risk. In rural communities, stigma can hinder monitoring, testing, and treatment and add to the risk of widespread outbreaks.

The stories of two rural West Virginia residents living with HIV show how powerful stigma can be and what it takes to overcome it.

Carl’s Story

Carl was in his senior year at Concord University in Mercer County, West Virginia, when he had some routine blood work done during a hospital admission.

“They found out that I was infected with HIV,” he said.

He thinks he contracted the disease from a same-sex partner. Even though he used protection, he said, his partner was careless one time.

In this story we use just Carl’s first name. He said it’s been a struggle telling people he has HIV because of the stigma against people with the disease.

“I have two people out of my entire family that know.” 

Credit Mary Meehan/ OVR
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Condoms and “shooting caps” available at a syringe service location

Even, among some doctors, Carl said, he encounters homophobia. He recalled an early visit to a doctor in nearby Beckley.

“She, in so many words said, ‘Well if I were you I wouldn’t have done the actions to get this,’” he remembered. “And that sent me spiraling, that a medical professional would be so crass to somebody that was so mentally fragile.”

At the time, Carl had just been diagnosed. He stopped taking his medication for a few days and almost gave up. Then he contacted the Ryan White program at Charleston Area Medical Center, where he now makes the two-hour round trip drive for check-up visits.

“Word Travels”

Tania Basta, who chairs the Department of Social and Public Health at Ohio University, has done research on the effects of stigma in rural Appalachia.

“There are providers who, in rural areas, unfortunately are still stigmatizing against their patients,” she said. “They may feel that, unfortunately, some people with HIV, they did this to themselves.” 

Credit Courtesy Ohio Univ.
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Ohio University health researcher Tania Basta.

Like most places in central Appalachia, West Virginia does not have a high number of people with HIV or AIDS. At the end of 2016 the state health department recorded 1,746 people in West Virginia who were living with HIV.

But researchers like Basta worry about undiagnosed cases, especially in the rural areas of the state affected by the opioid crisis.

“Testing is an issue,” she said. “And I’m not saying that stigma is any higher in rural areas. It’s just that, because of the nature of living in small towns, where everybody kind of knows everybody, word travels quickly.”

The CDC report on the recent outbreak in West Virginia listed other factors contributing to the spread of disease: transportation from remote areas, poor health literacy, and stigma. 

Credit Alexandra Kanik/ Ohio Valley ReSource
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The new cases included both sexual transmission and needle drug use. Fourteen of the 15 counties where new cases were identified were on the CDC’s 2016 list of counties at high risk of disease. Yet only three of the counties had syringe service programs, which medical evidence shows is an effective way to reduce harm from drug use. Syringe services, also known as needle exchanges, can also serve as an opportunity to test for needle-borne disease.

Elena’s Story

Few people living with HIV or AIDS in southern West Virginia are willing to tell their stories in public. Elena Imes is one of them. She has lived with the disease for 18 years.

For many years before the disease progressed, Imes said, she did not know she had been infected by her husband. She worries that there are many undiagnosed cases in her community.

“Part of the problem is, the negativity of the disease itself, and the fear, and the stereotyping,” she said. People she meets often assume that “if you’ve got AIDS, you’ve probably did something bad, Christianly bad.”

And she sees that affecting people’s willingness to learn their HIV status

“They don’t want anyone to see them go take a test. Consequently, people don’t take the test.”

Imes has told her story to the media several times, but speaking out has brought some backlash. She recounted one incident from a few years ago, when she worked at a local Walmart. 

Credit Darryl Cannady, South Central Educational Development
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Elena Imes at a World Aids Day event she organized

A woman recognized her from a TV news story.

“I know you, you’re from the TV, you’re killing us all!” Imes remembered the woman shouting in the parking lot, drawing a crowd. She accused Imes of infecting people by touching things when she stocked the shelves.

“That hurt so bad,” Imes said, tears welling up at the memory. “And that woman really thought she was warning everybody.”

Imes has had other experiences like this over the years. Another woman in her neighborhood was worried Imes could infect people by swimming at the local pool. So Imes stopped going there to swim.

But it hasn’t all been bad. She has neighbors and church friends who’ve been supportive and who check on her. She has four adopted sons, all grown, who stop by sometimes. But for the most part, she has no family to lean on.

Imes lives in a small wooden house in Coal City in Raleigh County, where she runs a small animal rescue service. As we step through the front door, pink curtains and a thin layer of frayed plastic cover holes in her windows. When I visited she wore five layers of clothes indoors to keep warm.

She weighs less than 80 pounds. Her health is deteriorating and she’s struggling to get by.

“Financially, I’m in ruin.”

She doesn’t work at Walmart anymore. A few years ago, she lost her mode of transportation. One night, she tried to hitchhike to work, and was raped. Her perpetrators were never caught. Now, she worries that those who raped her are unintentionally spreading the disease.

Staying Put

As I listened to Imes tell her story, and Carl, I wondered why they stay where they are.

Imes said one reason is because she wants to stay and help other people who have the same disease.

“I would tell them the worst thing they could do is to keep it a secret,” she said. “If you can toughen up, you need to share it, be open about it. That’s the problem, if more people were open then the stigma wouldn’t be there.”

Because she’s been in the media telling her story Imes has become almost a one-woman support system for people here who have HIV. That’s something Carl said people need more of.

“The biggest fear that someone with this has this infection has is doing it alone,” he said. “And that often causes you to become depressed because you are lonely.”

I asked Carl if he’s ever considered moving to a bigger city, where he’d have access to medical treatment closer to home, and where he wouldn’t have to feel shame at his church, or at his local pharmacy.

“I would rather live here and put up a front then move somewhere and be myself,” he said. “I know that sounds kind of odd, but I do love this place. It is a beautiful place.”

Although he is worried that this article will lead his friends and family to find out he has HIV, Carl said he thinks it’s worth the risk. Telling his story might help someone decide to get tested.

Ohio Valley ReSource reporter Aaron Payne contributed to this report.  

Big Increase Seen in W.Va. Needle Exchange Program

Health officials say more than 8,300 new syringes have been distributed in the nearly two years that a needle exchange program has been operated in a West Virginia city.

The Intelligencer reports that nearly 6,000 of the clean needles have been given out in the past nine months by the Wheeling-Ohio County Board of Health Department. That’s more than double the number from the exchange program’s initial year.

Health Department administrator Howard Gamble says the exchange program has been going well.

The health department conducts the off-site program at a Northwood Health System facility from noon to 3 p.m. every Friday. Operating a one-for-one free exchange, health personnel accept used needles and can give out an equal number of sterile syringes.

Doctor Spends Own Money to Establish Needle Exchange Program

A doctor is spending her own money to establish needle exchange programs in Beckley.The Register-Herald reports that Dr. Ayne Amjad, along with the help…

A doctor is spending her own money to establish needle exchange programs in Beckley.

The Register-Herald reports that Dr. Ayne Amjad, along with the help of Beckley Pharmacy owner Ali Sherwani, recently opened syringe exchange programs at the two Beckley Pharmacy locations.

Amjad says she had anticipated a local health department to establish a needle exchange in southern West Virginia, but since one hasn’t materialized, she decided to create one herself.

The free, confidential program allows intravenous drug users to exchange used needles for clean ones to help prevent the spread of disease, establish trust between pharmacists and clients, and help users access treatment options.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says southern West Virginia is an at-risk area for an HIV or hepatitis C outbreak.

Huntington Officials: Needle Exchange Program Succeeding

  The city of Huntington says a program that allows drug users to trade in dirty syringes for clean ones is showing signs of success.

The program was established in September at the Cabell-Huntington Health Department and involves elected officials, health professionals, private businesses and members of the recovery community.

Recovery Point of Huntington Executive Director Matt Boggs said in a news release from the city that the program has had steady usage.

The exchange program offers educational materials and recovery coaches. The coaches are at the Health Department to provide peer support to anyone who seeks treatment Wednesday afternoons.

The release says city officials believe substance use and abuse trends will decrease due to the program and other efforts.

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