Call for jail needle fix

19/Mar/2010

Comments: 7 readers have left a comment

PRISONERS at Casuarina Prison should have access to a needle exchange program, according to a study published this week.

The paper, published in the Journal of Heath, Safety and Environment, said the prison should introduce prison-regulated and controlled needle and syringe programs to reduce the risk of prison officers and prisoners contracting HIV and Hepatitis C from used needles.

The research found that despite strict controls, drugs did enter Casuarina Prison.

Lead author John Ryan said prison authorities knew prisoners were injecting and should see a risk to staff but were not taking precautions to control the risk and were acting irresponsibly as employers.

“Research suggests that seven per cent of prison officers may suffer accidental needle stick injury,” he said.

“Prison officers regularly come across needles which are hidden by prisoners, many of whom share needles and have the debilitating Hepatitis C virus.”

Mr Ryan said that as long as prisoners did not have access to clean needles, prison officers were at a higher risk of accidental injury that could lead to Hepatitis C infection.

“If a guard searching a cell searches up under a bed, for example, he can never be sure he won’t get a prick from a contaminated needle that has been shared dozens of times,” Mr Ryan said.

He also said it was incorrect to fear that prison addicts’ access to needles would lead to them being used as weapons because the program had been accepted and was effective in other prisons.

In response, Department of Corrective Services Offender Management deputy commissioner Jackie Tang said the department supported a zero-tolerance policy on drugs in prison.

“As such, we do not supply sterile injecting equipment and do not plan to introduce needle exchange programs into the State’s prisons,” he said.

Mr Tang said prison officers were supplied with personal protective gloves, education, training and procedures to minimise the risk of needle stick injuries.


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What everyone else is thinking

rene

20/03/2010

1. Supply chain: 1. Needles. 2. Drugs. 3. All druggies in country commit jailable offence to join party. Roll on the good times!!!

Mr Tang is 100% right. Improve vigilance and equipment. It will be cheaper in the long run if only by not having these study(idiot) groups.

Rob

19/03/2010

Why don't we give them access to couriers, and registered post too so they can avoid having to smuggle the drugs in. What happened to punishment?

gazza

19/03/2010

You have to be joking...

They should be given some preparation that makes them violently sick IF they have drugs in their system...

What idiot do gooder thought this up?

JohnV

19/03/2010

Every effort should be made to enable prisoners to kick their habits and become clean, therefore encouraging use is counter productive. Guards must adjust their searching techniques to avoid needle sticks. Regular blood tests on suspect inmates should be mandatory, along with follow ups of visitors involved. If inmates leave prison still addicted, what chance have they of adopting a straight lifestyle.

clacks

19/03/2010

what a laugh, drug sellers are sent to jail , what for? so they can get clean needles to feed a prisoners habit.
what about rehab,"butlers holiday camp" come on.

David Chambers

19/03/2010

I support the first comment and Jackie Tang. Prison is the place to get prisoners clean. No encouragement to aid drug taking by misguided people thanks.

Wouterina Klein

19/03/2010

What next how sure can any one be they will not be used as a weapon. Prisoners are perhaps in prison because of crimes committed to feed their drug habit would the supply of clean needles not indicate drug use is okay, the when released instead of being rehabilitated they may commit a crime again to feed the habit . Bring in the sniffer dogs to check visitors, cells and prisoners this can be done several times during the day. Drugs can be removed were there's a will there's a way
don't put it in the to hard basket that's a cop out.


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