Miami-Dade gives clean needles to drug users. Could the program expand to Broward, Palm Beach?

Florida counties could be allowed to create programs for drug users to swap dirty needles for unused ones.

The Florida Legislature is considering a bill that would expand needle-exchange programs statewide. Presently, only Miami-Dade County is authorized to operate a needle-exchange program.

State Rep. Cary Pigman, R-Sebring, said needle exchanges not only provide a gateway to treatment but also save taxpayers dollars by stopping the spread of HIV and other diseases.

“This is a hand reached out to an individual who is troubled,” said Pigman, an emergency-medicine physician. “It’s the right thing to do. It’s the moral thing to do.”

Although needle-exchange programs have been endorsed by public health advocates, they have been controversial. Opponents argue supplying needles encourage drug use.

Efforts to expand Miami-Dade’s program have not been successful in previous legislative sessions.

State Rep. Shevrin Jones, D-West Park, said he’s optimistic this year will be different as the Legislature searches for ways to address the opioid epidemic.

Incoming House Speaker José R. Oliva, R-Miami Lakes, visited Miami-Dade’s needle-exchange program.

Oliva — who was been vocal in the need to lower health care costs — was “impressed” by what he saw, said Fred Piccolo, a spokesman for the speaker’s office.

sswisher@sunsentinel.com, 561-243-6634 or @SkylerSwisher

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