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Policy & Politics U.S. Ends Funding Ban for Needle ExchangesDecember 21, 2009 A 21-year ban on federal funding for needle-exchange programs (NEPs) came to an end with the signing of an appropriations bill on Wednesday. The repeal, part of a $163.5 billion labor, health, and education appropriations measure, does not allocate federal funding for needle-exchange initiatives. However, it does make such programs eligible for federal money for NEPs, subject to approval by local police and health officials. "Hundreds of thousands of Americans will not get HIV/AIDS or hepatitis C, thanks to Congress repealing the federal syringe funding ban," said Bill Piper, spokesperson for the Drug Policy Alliance. The campaign to free up federal funding for the programs argued that NEPs were effective in reducing disease without increasing drug use itself. Twenty-nine cities with such programs saw HIV infection rates drop by 5.8 percent, while 52 cities without them saw a 5.9 percent increase, according to a 1997 international analysis. During consideration of the bill, a House-Senate conference committee successfully removed a provision that would have barred federal funding to any program operating within 1,000 feet of a school, park, or day care center, effectively removing much if not all of large urban areas from eligibility. San Francisco Chronicle 12.18.2009; Bob Egelko ![]() Ding-Dong, the U.S. Needle Exchange Funding Ban Is Dead -- but the Struggle for Funds Will Continue, Advocates Say This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. Visit the CDC's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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