May 20, 2003
A 43-year-old prostitute who uses heroin about 40 times a week said she wants her sexual partners to use condoms. But if they refuse, she goes along, for the money. She tries to use clean needles when she shoots up, but if one is not handy, she will use a dirty one. On the day Simpson spoke with her, she pulled a handful of dirty needles from a small purse and received an equal number of clean ones.
Drug users in the Cass Park area know to look for the silver Life Points van. The van goes to 10 sites at regular times around Detroit. The exchange is always one-to-one. Most people also pick up free condoms.
In Detroit, most needle exchange workers are former addicts. They do not look down on their clients or make them feel even worse about themselves. They call them "brother" and "sister," and mean it. Life Point has more than 2,500 drug users signed up for services, and its workers have gotten 20 percent of their clients into treatment.
Life Point's budget, $216,000 last year, will be cut in half this year. That will mean fewer sites and a 50 percent reduction in services, said CHAG Executive Director Cindy Bolden Calhoun. Life Points lost a $25,000 grant from the Tides Foundation, and has not gotten the $89,000 it received last year from the city of Detroit. The Michigan AIDS Fund has also reduced funding because it has less money to give.
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