By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News
Kentucky leads the nation in syringe exchanges for drug users, as a way to prevent the spread of disease, but local officials in some counties at risk of disease outbreaks from intravenous drug use have resisted pleas from experts to allow exchanges.
At a public-health panel discussion at the University of Kentucky, advocates of the exchanges shared some advice on how to overcome the opposition: persistence, partners, new terminology, realizing that politicians want to get re-elected, and having plenty of arguments at hand,
"Also remember that logic and rationality doesn't always win out, passion and persistence does," said Sheila Schuster, executive director of Advocacy Action Network, an umbrella organization of lobbies, who has lobbied the state legislature for more than 40 years.
The importance of early prevention, and access to care for mental health and substance-use disorders, were other topics of the panel, hosted by the UK College of Public Health during National Public Health Week, which falls during the first week of April.
Dr. Ardis Hoven, an infectious disease specialist and consultant with the state Department for Public Health, called Kentucky's syringe exchanges a "bright spot" when it comes to tackling the issue of substance abuse and addiction, adding that she was "exalted" that they had taken off as they had.
Kentucky lawmakers approved such programs in 2015 in an anti-heroin bill, as a way to decrease the spread of HIV and hepatitis C, which are commonly spread by the sharing of needles among intravenous drug users. They require both local approval and funding. Since, local governments have approved 52 syringe exchanges, with all but four operational.
However, exchanges exist in only about half the 54 Kentucky counties that the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified among about 250 in the nation as most at risk from an outbreak of HIV (the virus that leads to AIDS) or hepatitis C as a result of intravenous drug use.
Hoven said people who advocate for exchanges should be prepared to defend them. She calls them "harm reduction programs," saying that the term more accurately describes what they do. She said they not only pass out clean needles and syringes, but also provide health screenings and vaccines, access to treatment, and a place to build trusting relationships between clients and workers.
Former Gov. Steve Beshear, who was governor when the anti-heroin bill passed, said that while it's important to recognize that politicians are always working toward re-election and don't want to deal with controversial issues, they often "answer to the squeaky wheel." He added that "persistence and leadership" are key to any advocacy work, adding that success often requires several attempts.
Dr. Hatim Omar, a pediatrics professor at UK, advised the advocates to make sure they put a human face to the problem, because that makes it real, and to present their case in a way that would benefit local officials, reiterating that their main concern is to get re-elected.
Schuster, who has worked with the legislature since 1978, said she learned early on that you have to show up with a better argument than "It's the right thing to do."
Schuster, who lobbies on mental-health and disability issues, said advocates need to find unlikely partners, such as the faith community; get to know local government and health officials; learn from communities that have succeeded; have multiple arguments ready; and, most important, just show up.
"You've got to stir the pot," Hoven said. In addition to being armed with data and information, she encouraged building coalitions that truly understand the issue and are able to articulate it and to work with their local health departments. She also encouraged them to make sure they bring the police to the table.
"The other thing that you need to be ready to do at any given moment is to defend what a syringe service program or exchange program is and what it is not," she said. "And you ought to be able to do that in your sleep. That's crucial."
Opponents of syringe exchanges often base their criticisms on belief, not fact, and that's sometimes true of policymakers, Schuster said. For example, she said some legislators tell her that they think the programs enable drug use, which they don't, according to research; or that they need to be a strict one-for-one exchange, which undermines the goal of thwarting infection.
"We need to be educating our policymakers, because they are operating on wrong information," said Schuster.
Prevention and underlying causes discussed
On another front, Omar said the best way to treat addiction is to prevent it.
He pointed to the National Longitudinal Study on Adolescent to Adult Health, which found that teens who have a solid support systems, like having an adult to talk to and living in a safe environment, along with having something useful to do, are more likely to be successful in school and are protected against many things, including addictions, suicide and early sexual activity.
"This is I think where we are failing our young people," he said. "We are not providing adequate support systems."
He stressed that we also have to be honest when we talk to children about these topics, adding that the U.S. has to get over the "repetitive myth" that providing factual information to young people about drugs, sex and suicide will prompt them to do it.
"All the science in the world shows it's exactly the opposite," he said. "Knowledge is power, it improves things. . . . People do it because they don't know any better."
Beshear, who expanded Medicaid to Kentuckians who earn up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, spoke to the importance of having access to health insurance as a way to combat substance-use disorders. He said that since the expansion in 2014, Kentucky's uninsured rate has dropped from over 20 percent to 7.5 percent.
He pointed out that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is also the reason health insurance plans now cover mental health and substance-use disorders, including the Medicaid expansion population. He added this coverage to the traditional Medicaid population. Schuster added that in the first three years after the state expanded Medicaid, there was a 700 percent increase in the utilization of substance-use-disorder treatment.
Everyone on the panel agreed that until Kentucky addresses its social determinants of health, which are things like housing, education, employment, and environmental exposures that are known to affect health and well-being, it's unlikely that the state will truly improvements in its health outcomes.
"For us to ultimately get somewhere we've got to address all of those things," said Beshear.
Hoven, who called this issue "the elephant in the room," said that when it comes to social determinants, "We can flap our gums all day long," but until Kentucky dedicates policies that are completely funded and that empower the leaders of communities to deal with these issues, the state won't make much progress.
Schuster reminded the group that we also have to overcome the stigma that continues to exist around mental health and substance use disorders: "Stigma is alive and well."
Kentucky Health News
Kentucky leads the nation in syringe exchanges for drug users, as a way to prevent the spread of disease, but local officials in some counties at risk of disease outbreaks from intravenous drug use have resisted pleas from experts to allow exchanges.
At a public-health panel discussion at the University of Kentucky, advocates of the exchanges shared some advice on how to overcome the opposition: persistence, partners, new terminology, realizing that politicians want to get re-elected, and having plenty of arguments at hand,
"Also remember that logic and rationality doesn't always win out, passion and persistence does," said Sheila Schuster, executive director of Advocacy Action Network, an umbrella organization of lobbies, who has lobbied the state legislature for more than 40 years.
Dr. Ardis Hoven, an infectious disease specialist and consultant with the state Department for Public Health, called Kentucky's syringe exchanges a "bright spot" when it comes to tackling the issue of substance abuse and addiction, adding that she was "exalted" that they had taken off as they had.
Kentucky lawmakers approved such programs in 2015 in an anti-heroin bill, as a way to decrease the spread of HIV and hepatitis C, which are commonly spread by the sharing of needles among intravenous drug users. They require both local approval and funding. Since, local governments have approved 52 syringe exchanges, with all but four operational.
State health department chart as of February; click on it for a larger version |
Hoven said people who advocate for exchanges should be prepared to defend them. She calls them "harm reduction programs," saying that the term more accurately describes what they do. She said they not only pass out clean needles and syringes, but also provide health screenings and vaccines, access to treatment, and a place to build trusting relationships between clients and workers.
Former Gov. Steve Beshear, who was governor when the anti-heroin bill passed, said that while it's important to recognize that politicians are always working toward re-election and don't want to deal with controversial issues, they often "answer to the squeaky wheel." He added that "persistence and leadership" are key to any advocacy work, adding that success often requires several attempts.
Dr. Hatim Omar, a pediatrics professor at UK, advised the advocates to make sure they put a human face to the problem, because that makes it real, and to present their case in a way that would benefit local officials, reiterating that their main concern is to get re-elected.
Schuster, who has worked with the legislature since 1978, said she learned early on that you have to show up with a better argument than "It's the right thing to do."
Schuster, who lobbies on mental-health and disability issues, said advocates need to find unlikely partners, such as the faith community; get to know local government and health officials; learn from communities that have succeeded; have multiple arguments ready; and, most important, just show up.
"You've got to stir the pot," Hoven said. In addition to being armed with data and information, she encouraged building coalitions that truly understand the issue and are able to articulate it and to work with their local health departments. She also encouraged them to make sure they bring the police to the table.
"The other thing that you need to be ready to do at any given moment is to defend what a syringe service program or exchange program is and what it is not," she said. "And you ought to be able to do that in your sleep. That's crucial."
Opponents of syringe exchanges often base their criticisms on belief, not fact, and that's sometimes true of policymakers, Schuster said. For example, she said some legislators tell her that they think the programs enable drug use, which they don't, according to research; or that they need to be a strict one-for-one exchange, which undermines the goal of thwarting infection.
"We need to be educating our policymakers, because they are operating on wrong information," said Schuster.
Prevention and underlying causes discussed
On another front, Omar said the best way to treat addiction is to prevent it.
He pointed to the National Longitudinal Study on Adolescent to Adult Health, which found that teens who have a solid support systems, like having an adult to talk to and living in a safe environment, along with having something useful to do, are more likely to be successful in school and are protected against many things, including addictions, suicide and early sexual activity.
He stressed that we also have to be honest when we talk to children about these topics, adding that the U.S. has to get over the "repetitive myth" that providing factual information to young people about drugs, sex and suicide will prompt them to do it.
"All the science in the world shows it's exactly the opposite," he said. "Knowledge is power, it improves things. . . . People do it because they don't know any better."
Beshear, who expanded Medicaid to Kentuckians who earn up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level, spoke to the importance of having access to health insurance as a way to combat substance-use disorders. He said that since the expansion in 2014, Kentucky's uninsured rate has dropped from over 20 percent to 7.5 percent.
He pointed out that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is also the reason health insurance plans now cover mental health and substance-use disorders, including the Medicaid expansion population. He added this coverage to the traditional Medicaid population. Schuster added that in the first three years after the state expanded Medicaid, there was a 700 percent increase in the utilization of substance-use-disorder treatment.
Everyone on the panel agreed that until Kentucky addresses its social determinants of health, which are things like housing, education, employment, and environmental exposures that are known to affect health and well-being, it's unlikely that the state will truly improvements in its health outcomes.
"For us to ultimately get somewhere we've got to address all of those things," said Beshear.
Schuster reminded the group that we also have to overcome the stigma that continues to exist around mental health and substance use disorders: "Stigma is alive and well."
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