Pubdate: Wed, 08 Mar 2006 Source: Jasper Booster (CN AB) Copyright: 2006 The Jasper Booster Contact: http://www.jasperbooster.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/788 Author: Patrick Mooney Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Let's Talk - Community Outreach Services HARM REDUCTION: HELPING ADDICTS FEEL HUMAN In a drug-user context harm reduction can be explained by this definition, one of many to be found; "It is any program or policy designed to reduce drug-related harm without requiring the cessation of drug use." Further to this, and found on a web page out of the UK, another author states that "it does not focus on abstinence: although harm reduction supports those who seek to moderate or reduce their drug use, it neither excludes nor presumes a treatment goal of abstinence. Harm reduction approaches recognize that short-term abstinence oriented treatments have low success rates, and, for opiate users, high post-treatment overdose rates. In my own words, I see the practice more as a philosophy and far less a science. I recently attended a harm reduction conference in Lethbridge. I was already quite familiar with the term, and some of the practices, of harm reduction. Or at least I thought I was. I wanted to take to the conference my own notion of harm reduction and have that honed to current beliefs and philosophies regarding the practice by the experts themselves. As it turned out, I came away from the conference wiser than I was upon arriving, but, at the same time, knowing less about harm reduction than I had anticipated. To imply I am wiser about knowing less is, at a glance, a paradoxical statement, but true nonetheless. From the information presented I was able to drop some serious misconceptions that I had harboured for some time. In a sense, this was like carrying something heavy unnecessarily. I came away with a lightness of being and a clearer mind-set as a result of the conference. The fact of the matter is this; little is known about harm reduction and research is scarce. I didn't really know this before attending and I was disappointed in realizing that I would come away from the conference with fewer answers than anticipated. We love to measure and label practices and not being able to do so with harm reduction, we fail to see the value in enacting such a practice. In time, we will. The most current example of harm reduction practices are safe injection sites like the one in the East Hastings neighbourhood of Vancouver. The goal there, in one respect, is to reduce the spread of HIV by providing clean needles and a safe environment for drug users to inject. But, as of today, the evidence of it working is still unclear. Statistics take time to tell a story. But there is a whole other avenue to explore with such a practice and that is the sociological one. It tends to be ignored because it can't be counted. One may clap their hands upon finding out that one person avoided infection by using the safe site but something far more significant might have occurred. (Anyone talk to him lately? No, we'll just wait for the stats to tell the story.)When that drug-user came in to use safely, the safe site not only gave him a clean needle, but it allowed him to feel like a person again - that he wasn't evil, that he wasn't just a drug-addicted scum of a criminal. The safe site opened the door for him to come in from the cold, to be accepted without judgement. You must bear in mind how marginalized this segment of our society has become. They are on the outside of everything. Failures. Not only in their own minds, but in the minds of their community as well. Awarding the respect and dignity the drug-user deserves as a person might be the key to the success of the harm reduction approach. The safe site doesn't call for you to quit using, passes no moral judgement on your lifestyle and respects your right to make choices. In doing so, the program creates an environment that may lead to saner thinking and eventual abstinence, but on the users own terms. Harm reduction comes from a place of respect, dignity and acceptance of the fact that despite the 'war on drugs' (which has been a dismal failure), and the criminalization of substances, society will always be faced with a population of drug-users. It is morally imperative for our community to embrace the struggle of the afflicted and make that struggle our own. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman