How syringe exchanges in Minnesota reduce the spread of disease

Despite the lifesaving potential of these kinds of programs, syringe exchanges were federally banned at the national level from 1988 to 2015. A study published in the International Journal on Drug Policy attributes the end of the ban to shifting perspectives and lessons learned during the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
The rise of HIV infection related to the growth of the opioid epidemic in the early 2010s was powerful enough to sway politicians who had been reluctant to embrace syringe exchanges. States in the years since passed their own laws to create exchange programs. Most recently, a bill authorizing community syringe exchanges passed in the Nebraska Legislature but was ultimately vetoed by Gov. Jim Pillen.
Syringe exchanges in Minnesota include:
Clinic 555 Syringe Exchange
Saint Paul, Minnesota
Harm Reduction Sisters
Duluth, Minnesota
Healthfinders SSP
Faribault, Minnesota
In N' Out
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Indigenous Peoples Task Force Syringe Exchange
Minneapolis, Minnesota
International Falls Exchange
International Falls, Minnesota
Minnesota COPE
Mcgregor, Minnesota
Minnesota Transgender Health Coalition
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Rural AIDS Action Network Duluth
Duluth, Minnesota
Rural AIDS Action Network Mankato
Mankato, Minnesota
Rural AIDS Action Network Virginia
Virginia, Minnesota
Southside Harm Reduction Services
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Valhalla Place
Brooklyn Park, Minnesota
Critics often argue that needle exchanges promote drug use at the expense of taxpayer dollars, or that they feel unsafe around the people with substance use disorder that use them.
Research conducted over three decades, however, shows that syringe exchange programs provide a benefit to communities, according to the National Institutes of Health.
A 2019 study from the National Bureau of Economic Research found that syringe exchange programs reduced HIV diagnoses by as much as 18%. They've also been shown to save taxpayers money. In Indiana, a state-implemented syringe exchange program is expected to save taxpayers $120 million. People who use syringe service programs are also five times more likely to begin a drug treatment program and three times as likely to quit injection drug abuse, according to the CDC.
This story features data reporting by Elena Cox, writing by Dom DiFurio, and is part of a series utilizing data automation across 46 states.