Free needles and syringes against AIDS
From the collection of
From the collection of
Interviews about controversial new needle exchange for drug users in Peterborough.
Health officials in Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, explain why they have set up a scheme encouraging drug users to hand in their used injection kits in return for free needles and syringes - probably the first needle exchange scheme in England. After a presentation showing with coloured water how contaminated blood remains in a used syringe, there's a display of posters and leaflets for the Peterborough AIDS Helpline.
Tonie Gibson, Chairman of Peterborough Health Authority, explains that drug users can visit the hospital drug addiction clinic, and even if they cannot break their habit, they can access clean kit to minimise their risk of contracting and passing on AIDS. Dr Joginder Anand stresses that the service is confidential and information about drug users is not shared with the police.
The reporter was Greg Barnes for this video made to be shown in a news story on Anglia Television early evening news / magazine programme About Anglia.
video made to be inserted during live broadcast of Anglia Television's early evening news / magazine programme About Anglia. The live studio presentation provided context for the video as part of a news story or magazine feature within the programme. About Anglia was not recorded during broadcast, so it is usually just the pre-recorded programme inserts which survive. In the 1980s Anglia Television was broadcasting to a wide area in the East of England including Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Essex, Norfolk, Northamptonshire, Suffolk and adjoining parts of Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire and Rutland where there was some overlap with neighbouring ITV regions.