The availability of the drug has expanded beyond the DEA and government projects to minimize and attempt to hinder the flow of the drug. Heroin is highly addictive and poses risks for HIV through the sharing of used needles. These medical syringes the users receive from local drug stores are easy to get but are meant to be disposed of properly. More recently children are being sent to the emergency room from simply stepping on used needles at a local park or in supermarket parking lots. There are also law enforcement officers getting stuck with a used needle. Users hide in the alleys or in their cars and in broad daylight, disposing of their drug paraphernalia in plain sight. Reaching out to users and advising them to recycle their used needles properly will greatly lower the risks of any possible infections or diseases. Experts will place dumping boxes for used needles in areas where the usage rate is known to be higher. These same people will walk around the streets and individually ask users for their used needles and trade them for clean ones. It is safe to surrender the drug paraphernalia as you cannot be charged by the law for proper disposing of used …show more content…
These same people might fear that safe needle exchange programs might invite addicts or entertain drug abuse in their communities. Many people disagree with safe needle exchange that even a federal law has been put in place banning the financing of such programs. All of this is due to controversial nature of the topic, when infact is it known that users are more likely to enter a treatment center when in the presence of a needle exchange programs. Yet society will never see the programs as morally