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Nova Scotia

Why correctional officers oppose prison needle exchange programs

The union representing correctional officers in Canada organized a protest this week against theintroduction of a needle exchange program at the Nova Institution for Womenin Truro. The program already exists at the Atlantic Institution in Renous, N.B.

Advocates hope program will cut down on transmission of diseases such as hepatitis C, HIV

The union representing Canadian correctional officers held a protest this week in Truro, N.S., against the introduction of needle exchange programs in prisons. (Lars Hagberg/Canadian Press)

For Canada's correctional officers, needle exchange programs in prison could become a matter of life and death, and not just for the people they are intended to help.

"We'veheard threats from inmates when they were first going to introduce this program that [a needle] wouldbe the first thing that they would use against a correctional officer," Jeff Wilkins,Atlantic regional president for the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, told CBC Information Morningin Halifax.

The union organized a protest this week against theintroduction of a needle exchange program at the Nova Institution for Womenin Truro. The program already exists at the Atlantic Institution in Renous, N.B.

As well, not every inmate using intravenous drugs has access to his or her ownneedleormay not be approved for the program, and sharing will continue, Wilkins said Thursday.

The onus will be on corrections officers "tomaintain observation and continued control as to where that needle is at all times," which is an extra burden, he said.

The union would like to see health-care workers bear that responsibility.

A needle exchange program is set to begin at the Nova Institution for Women in Truro. (CBC)

He said officers support the current system in place in prisons sniffer dogs, body scanners, access to bleach for cleaning needlesand methadone treatment to prevent or minimize the use of IV drugs.

But Peter Brown, who spent12 year in prisons in Canada, doesn't agree. He said he didn't use intravenous drugs when he was first incarcerated and developed the habit behind bars.

"My experience with it is it's in there, people using the needles are already there. In the 12 years that I spent in [Atlantic Institution in Renous} whenever I wanted to use IVor if somebody else that I knew wanted to, we tracked down a needle."

Because needles are already in use behind bars,therisk of them being used as a weapons against guards is not new, he said.

Brown is completing a social services program while serving as a national board member for the Seventh Step Society, which provides peer support for ex-offenders.

He said treatingpeople with hepatitis C and HIV is costly, in both human and health-care terms,and reducing the risk of infection is worth it.

Prisoner advocates say needle exchange programs will cut down on the spread of infection of diseases such as hepatitis C and HIV. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC)

"Thetreatment for hepatitis C is $80,000 and HIV is a lifetime disease. So these costs all come back onto our health-care system. Ifwe can prevent ... just one person from contracting this disease, look at thesavings on our health-care system alone."

Brown said there are a number of factors behind drug use in prisons which makes it likely that the practiceisn't going to go away.

"Boredom was definitely one of them," he said. "The other one was probably because it becomes normal. So you know when you take everybody who has ... bad habits, drug habits, whatever these bad habits are, and you put them all in one place, these things start to become normalized."

Lack of programs and educational opportunity in high-security penal institutionsattributes to the drug use, he added.

With files from Information Morning Halifax