from peer to infinity engaging peers as partners in needle exchange

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From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

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Page 1: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

From Peer to InfinityEngaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

Page 2: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

Mat Southwell & Tam Miller AKA: Mr White & Mr Brown

Private sector training, consultancy and research service run by and for people who use drugs. Team’s unique selling point is its dual professional and experiential expertise.

Special focus on emerging drug trends. GST plays a role described by Dr Sloboda from NIDA as bridge-building – fostering communication and learning between academic, practice and using communities.

Page 3: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

OverviewOverview Secondary Needle Exchanges - HOT’s Hit

Squads – Mat Southwell

From underground peer needle exchange to professional partnerships – the drug user group experience – Tam Miller

From demons to angels – the role of drug suppliers in delivering peer needle exchange – advisor Nikki Coe

Page 4: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

The East London The East London Experience - ContextExperience - Context

1989 (HOT founded in 1991)

High levels of poverty & 40% black & minority ethnic communities

High drug prevalence exacerbated through housing policies

5% HIV rates but migrant trends from Latin EU Countries, Scotland and Ireland

Very under-developed services in late 1980s – mostly medical drug dependency units and no community services

Emergence of new drug trends

Page 5: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange
Page 6: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

The Niddrie The Niddrie Experience - ContextExperience - Context

From 1986

High levels of concentrated poverty - Edinburgh’s poorest scheme

High prevalence of injecting, particularly Temgesic (low dose buprenorphine), heroin and benzos

50% HIV rates reflecting police restrictions on injecting supplies in 1980s and pattern of group sharing

At time services very limited and based in city centre and only during office hours. Needle exchange bus didn’t arrive until 1992

Page 7: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

The Niddrie The Niddrie Experience - Experience -

InterventionsInterventions Informal sourcing of sterile injecting equipment –

‘peer sharing’

Illegal needle exchange – home and community based – operating within Niddrie

Mutual aid formalised with launch of Chemical Reaction user group in 1993 with Issues of Substance magazine

User group chair employed as Drugs Development Worker for Castle Project between 1995 to 2002

Return to informal needle exchange after service relationship ends

Page 8: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

The Niddrie The Niddrie Experience - LessonsExperience - Lessons

Ability of people who use drugs and their organisations to respond to community-level threats with or without drug services

Partnerships with drug services sustained while they are effective – partnership working is not a goal in and of itself but can be helpful

Privileged-access into closed drug scene

Working in a ‘deep community’ – reach and impact

Informal secondary exchange continues but reduced conversation with drug services

Page 9: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

The North East Essex The North East Essex Cautionary Note Cautionary Note

Mid-1990s - heroin and amphetamine sulphate main drugs of choice with strong injecting profile

Given the semi-rural area in the villages and towns around Colchester and Clacton peers, mostly drug suppliers, were engaged to deliver secondary needle exchange

Peer programme championed by Community Outreach Worker hosted in Health Promotion

Post was re-integrated into drug services when key post holder left losing commitment to secondary needle exchange

Police subsequently targeted, arrested and imprisoned most of the supply network involved in scheme

Page 10: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

Peer Needle Exchange Peer Needle Exchange - Shared Lessons- Shared Lessons

Merits of secondary needle exchange in ‘closed’ drug scenes

Ability of peer needle exchanges to reach cultural sub-groups who may be out of contact with services

Particular benefits of reaching women who injected drugs

Engaged with trends and risk behaviour at coal face supports work around harm reduction innovation

Positive focus for work of drug user groups

Sustained involvement of peers beyond formal service

Page 11: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

Grassroots Response Grassroots Response to Anthrax Crisis to Anthrax Crisis

Page 12: From Peer to Infinity Engaging Peers as Partners in Needle Exchange

Contact detailsContact details Tam Miller

Gold Standard Team & Chemical Reaction

[email protected]

07922 860042