Organization To Launch Syringe Clean Up In Charleston

A new initiative to find and properly dispose of discarded syringes around Charleston will launch later this month, officials said.

The pilot project called Unstuck Chuck aims to have drug users and other volunteers dedicate at least one day each month to finding and disposing of syringes, Solutions Oriented Addiction Response said in a statement. It also aims to offer education on proper disposal methods and provide appropriate means for disposal, the statement said.

Officials plan to begin the first official clean up on Jan. 29 at the Women’s Health Center of West Virginia.

“Our ultimate objective is to foster a safe and healthy community while connecting with the citizens of Charleston,” the organization said in a statement.

The effort follows the organization’s installation of two new syringe disposal boxes last year and its syringe pick up text line.

Needle Exchange Closes in Mercer County

The Mercer County Health Department voted Wednesday to close its needle exchange program due to strict requirements under a new state law, according to reporting from the Bluefield Daily Telegraph.

“Under the new law, we can’t comply,” Health Department Administrator Roger Topping told board members. He noted almost 50 requirements that had to be approved for a license to offer a harm reduction program that includes a needle exchange.

Mercer County health officials began the needle exchange in 2019.

The law in question, West Virginia Senate Bill 334, requires programs offering syringe exchanges to deny clean needles to those who don’t return used ones and only serve clients with state IDs.

Syringe exchanges are widely seen by public health experts as a key measure in preventing the spread of infectious diseases like HIV and hepatitis C among people who inject drugs.

Huntington, Charleston Look to Expand Syringe Exchange Programs

As the state looks for ways to deal with the effects of the opioid epidemic, one type of program has seen a steady increase in use during the past year in West Virginia’s two biggest cities. Needle exchanges in Charleston and Huntington are providing services to more addicts each week, but are struggling to find the money needed to expand.

William Thaxton is a recovery coach with Recovery Point in Huntington. It’s an addiction treatment center in Huntington focused on faith-based recovery and giving back to the community. He’s one a few counselors who work at the syringe exchange in Huntington each Wednesday. Thaxton is 20 months sober himself and has been through the recovery program at Recovery Point. His job at the syringe exchange is to let others going through addiction know that there is a way out.

“I wish we could have them on every corner,” Thaxton said. “We’ve actually taken a couple people to treatment, which is huge. That is amazing when someone walks in here and wants to go to treatment, because that’s the goal. You don’t have to use drugs the rest of your life, there is, recovery is possible and it’s out there.”

Expansion is a notion that both syringe exchange programs in both Huntington and Charleston are exploring.

A syringe exchange program allows those using the needles for intravenous drug use to exchange their used needles for clean ones. The hope is to prevent the spread of diseases like hepatitis B and C, and HIV. It’s a tactic cities like Huntington, Charleston, Wheeling and Morgantown are using to cut down on the prevalence of those diseases. Dr. Michael Brumage is the Executive Director and Health Officer of the Kanawha-Charleston Health Department. 

Credit Ashton Marra / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Dr. Michael Brumage.

“After a year, the program continues to grow either fortunately or unfortunately, as you choose to look at it, but what it means is we’re getting more and more people who are using who are coming into our facility,” Brumage said.

The program in Charleston started in December 2015. They used a model that had worked in Huntington for three months. Huntington’s program started in September 2015. In both cities, those seeking needles can come to the health department facilities and anonymously receive clean ones.

Both needle exchanges operate one day a week. Sixteen hundred different people have used Charleston’s exchange in the year since it started. They had their single biggest day last month, with 210 patients in five hours.

Huntington’s exchange provided needles for 1,973 individuals in its first year. Dr. Michael Kilkenny is the Physician Director at the Cabell-Huntington Health Department.

“We had really unexpected exponential growth of the program — we started out with 15 people on the first day and within four months we were over 100 a day and now we’re averaging somewhere in the 160 to 180 every session,” Kilkenny said.

Kilkenny said the majority of the people who used Huntington’s exchange were from Cabell County. Kilkenny said there are neighborhoods in the county and city that he knows have prevalent heroin use, but he isn’t seeing people from those neighborhoods at the syringe exchange. He said that’s where growing the program comes in, but it’s been slow in coming.

“Expansion could look like any number of options, more days in the same location to multiple locations that are fixed or even mobile,” Kilkenny said.

Why has expansion been slow? The simple answer is funding. Both Huntington and Charleston operate their programs using private donations and grants. And sometimes federal funding, which can be slow to show up. Kilkenny hopes the Cabell-Huntington Health Department can obtain a grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission that could help the process.

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WV Public Broadcasting

Dr. Brumage in Charleston said these programs have two hopes, one to get more people into recovery programs, but also to reduce the number of hepatitis C and HIV cases in the area. But he said that’s not easy to figure out this early in the process.

“One, we don’t really know what the true prevalence of hepatitis B, C or HIV is in our population because a number of people aren’t coming in to get tested,” Brumage said. “So as we test more, what we’re going to expect to see is an increase, but that’s not because it’s an increase in the number of cases, but an increase in the detection of cases.”

Brumage said it’ll take 2-3 years to get enough data to study the prevalence of hepatitis B, C and HIV in the area. But he said other studies show that syringe exchange programs have reduced the prevalence of these diseases. Those studies he’s talking about were ones conducted by the CDC in New York from 1990 to 2002. They showed a dip from 50 percent to 17 percent in HIV cases. Another study examined the syringe exchange in New York from 1990 to 2001 and found that Hepatitis C numbers decreased in prevalence from 80 percent to 59 percent among intravenous drug users.

Brumage said expansion could help in the decrease of hepatitis C and HIV as they give more people throughout the county these opportunities.

“If we can prevent a single case of hepatitis C, that basically pays for one patient to recover,” Brumage said. “So we know these things work and frankly it is a little frustrating that we have to go hat in hand to request funding, but we’re working with a number of different people and we hope there is ways that we can access some of the federal funding.”

Brumage and Kilkenny both want to expand their operations because they’ve seen what can happen once relationships are established with needle users. When individuals bring their needles to the health departments, they’re also checked by a nurse and offered time with counselors or recovery coaches from local rehab facilities. And if that user is ready to find a facility, the recovery coaches help find an open facility for the recovering addict.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation, Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

Huntington Shows Need for Needle Exchange

As needle exchanges just get going around the state, Huntington’s program has been up and running for three months.

Last week, a college-age woman sat in the reception area at the Cabell-Huntington Health Department waiting to exchange used hypodermic needles for clean ones.  

“I think it’s really great actually, it’s helped a lot of people, it’s helped people stay away from diseases you know what I mean and I just think it’s really great. They offer a lot of things here that help a lot of people, myself included.” 

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wikimedia commons

She didn’t wish to use her name, but she was one of the 115 people who showed up Wednesday to take part in the program. She said she’s been using heroin for a little over a year.

“I just wanted to try it and then it turned into now I have to, so I don’t get sick sort of thing, the fun part is kind of over.”

She said she’s using less and less to slowly ween herself off heroin while she’s waiting for a spot to open up in a treatment facility.

The Cabell-Huntington Health Department provides new needles each Wednesday. The program started at the beginning of September and through 15 weeks, the health department has seen more than 1,000 clients. Of the 80-100 people who use the service each week, half are returnees and the other half are making their first trip to the health department. Cabell-Huntington Health Department director Dr. Michael Kilkenny said he has mixed feelings about how well the needle-exchange program is doing.

“It’s hard to say that a service like this is a roaring success and feel good about it considering what service we’re providing and the level of problem that we’re actually identifying because of the demand for services that we’re having,” Kilkenny said. “We’re far exceeded our expectations.”

 The program’s purpose is to decrease the number of cases of diseases such as hepatitis B and C and HIV that are transferred through the sharing of dirty needles used during the injection of drugs, specifically heroin.

The number of addicts who use the program grew so quickly during the first few weeks that the hours of operation were extended from 1 to 3. The needle exchange is now open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. each Wednesday, with nurses often working past the 3 o’clock hour.

The sheer number of people who use the exchange convinced officials in other areas that the program was worth a try, areas like Charleston and Wheeling.

Michael Brumage is the Executive Director of the Kanawha-Charleston Health Department. Through the first few weeks his program only saw a handful of participants each Wednesday. But he said he expects things to pick up as word gets out. 

“While it brings them in the door for needle exchange, which itself is helpful in preventing Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C and HIV and other complications of sharing needles, including some terrible bacterial infections, we can also offer them services toward recovery, we can test them for STD’s and we can also offer  them contraceptive services,” Brumage said. 

Word of mouth and trust in the safety of the program are big factors in the Huntington exchange’s success. With police staying away, the nurses at the Cabell-Huntington Health Department have shown the program is all about helping the addicts stay as healthy as possible while they deal with addiction.

Jenny Erwin is a nurse in the Cabell-Huntington Health Department. She said they’re starting to build relationships with the addicts who come back week after week.

“The people that are returns, we’re building a rapport with them and we can ask them how’s your week going and that type of thing and they can tell us if they have an issue, they feel more comfortable now showing us abscesses or issues they have,” Erwin said. “They’ve shared with us that their skin is looking better because we’re doing good teaching as far as skin care and how to rotate your sites and clean real well.”

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wikimedia Commons

 Dr. Michael Kilkenny, the Director in Huntington, said that when the citiy’s program started, they estimated they would need $250,000 to run it the right way . The program still needs more funding, but has received $75,000 from the Benedum Foundation and $20,000 from West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources and donations of needles as well from others.

Kilkenny said the goal is to offer the service in other areas throughout Cabell County and new locations have even been scouted, but expansion won’t be possible until more funding comes in. 

Huntington Syringe Exchange Given Grant to Expand

West Virginia’s first syringe exchange program has received a $75,000 grant to expand.

The Herald-Dispatch of Huntington reports that the Claude Worthington Benedum Foundation awarded the grant Thursday to support education and risk reduction programs for drug-addicted individuals. The syringe exchange program was started in September by the Cabell-Huntington Health Department.

The Huntington program allows intravenous drug users to exchange used needles for clean ones at a clinic. Physician Director Dr. Michael Kilkenny says the grant will help the clinic, which he says needs to expand its hours to facilitate the number of addicts who are using the program.

The syringe exchange program is open from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. every Wednesday at the Cabell-Huntington Health Department.

Charleston Council Takes Step Toward Syringe Exchange

Charleston City Council has taken a step toward establishing a needle exchange program.

Council members approved an ordinance on Monday decriminalizing possession of hypodermic syringes and needles. The ordinance also allows distribution of needles and syringes that are part of a needle exchange program, so long as such a program is approved or sponsored by the city’s police chief.

Dr. Michael Brumage with the Kanawha-Charleston Health Department says the ordinance opens a path to begin a needle exchange program.

Such programs allow intravenous drug users to exchange used needles for clean ones.

Last week, the Wheeling-Ohio County Board of Health voted to establish a county-operated needle exchange program. Cabell County launched the state’s first program earlier this month.

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