Dr. Hansel Tookes: Legislature must pass syringe-exchange program

It might surprise you to know that Florida has the highest rate of new HIV infections of any state in America. In addition, Miami-Dade and Broward counties are ranked first and second, respectively, among U.S. counties for that same, ugly, statistic.

HIV/AIDS may have fallen from the headlines in recent years — and it certainly is no longer the pandemic that it once was — but cases have increased significantly in the U.S.

Florida, in particular, has been affected.

The Florida Legislature looks like it is finally going to take an important, first step in combatting new infections of HIV/AIDS, Hepatitis C and other infectious diseases among drug users — a group at particular risk for both contracting these diseases and spreading them to fellow users, their sexual partners, and emergency responders.

Sen. Oscar Braynon and I have been working on legislation to create a first-of-its-kind syringe-exchange program with the University of Miami since 2013. This session, the bill that we first introduced three years ago, the “Miami-Dade Infectious Disease Elimination Act” (“IDEA”), looks like it is on track to become law because of Braynon’s tireless work and the efforts of Rep. Katie Edwards, sponsor of a companion House bill.

Syringe-exchange programs save lives, period. Look no further than the diverse litany of organizations that support such programs to see validation of that point: the Florida and American Medical Associations, the National Academy of Sciences, the American Bar Association, and UNICEF, among many others.

While syringe-exchanges were once controversial, that is no longer the case. Studies have shown that not only do exchanges not encourage drug use, for many users, these programs are their first step to recovery and rehabilitation. Conservative legislatures in Kentucky and Indiana have both adopted syringe-exchange programs. And the Republican Congress recently repealed the years-long ban on federal funding for syringe exchange programs.

One factor that has made syringe exchange more commonplace is the support of law enforcement and first responders. Every day, police, firefighters and EMS workers are pricked with syringes in the line of duty. A study of police officers in Rhode Island showed that nearly one-in-three had been pricked at least once in their careers.

The bill proposed by Braynon and Edwards is only a pilot program and limited to Miami-Dade County. But it is a tremendous step forward for public health in Florida. In a recent letter to the Jacksonville Times-Union, Florida Surgeon General John Armstrong said, “public health is local” and advocated for a “community-centered approach to tackle…HIV/AIDS.”

That is precisely what Braynon and Edwards’ bill is — and one that, once implemented, can serve as an example to other communities.

I will be in Tallahassee this week, lobbying for the passage of this important legislation. As a physician, I’m usually the one in the position of saving lives. This week, I intend to tell members of the Florida House and Senate that the tables have temporarily turned, and the lives of many in South Florida are firmly in their hands.

Despite this being my fourth session lobbying for this bill, I remain optimistic, not cynical, that our Legislature will do what is necessary to save lives in Florida.

***

Dr. Hansel Tookes is a resident in internal medicine at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. He received his MD and MPH from University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine. Column courtesy of Context Florida.

Phil Ammann

Phil Ammann is a Tampa Bay-area journalist, editor and writer. With more than three decades of writing, editing, reporting and management experience, Phil produced content for both print and online, in addition to founding several specialty websites, including HRNewsDaily.com. His broad range includes covering news, local government, entertainment reviews, marketing and an advice column. Phil has served as editor and production manager for Extensive Enterprises Media since 2013 and lives in Tampa with his wife, visual artist Margaret Juul. He can be reached on Twitter @PhilAmmann or at [email protected].



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