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What Is Harm Reduction?

Protecting the health of people who use drugs requires providing the services and resources they need.

Published
By
Morgan Coulson
,
Melissa Hartman

Harm reduction is exactly what it sounds like: reducing the harm associated with using drugs through a variety of public health interventions. But the concept relies on more than these tools and begins, at the most fundamental level, with recognizing that all people deserve safety and dignity. It does not treat drug use as a moral failing.

Harm reduction acknowledges that drugs are widely available in our society. It encompasses the understanding that traditional law enforcement approaches or those that require complete abstinence do not decrease demand, use, or negative health consequences of substance use. 

What problems does harm reduction try to solve?

The primary goal of harm reduction is to save lives and protect the health of both people who use drugs and their communities. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, those who use substances are more likely to have HIV/AIDS, hepatitis B and C, mental health disorders, and chronic conditions like cancer and lung disease.

Other harm reduction objectives include decreasing the stigma associated with addiction, increasing education on safer substance use, encouraging protected sex, and connecting people who use drugs with health and social services or support groups.

There are also overarching aims like preventing transmission of blood-borne or sexually transmitted infections (STIs), discouraging the use of shared needles or equipment, and decreasing the number of overdose deaths.

What does harm reduction look like in practice?

Some of the best-known harm reduction tools include:

  • Free syringe service programs
  • Overdose prevention sites
  • Fentanyl tests
  • Naloxone kits and training 
  • Sterile injection or smoking equipment 

Harm reduction also comprises addiction facilities, support groups, and medical services, including wound care, vaccinations, and COVID-19 masks. Sex education, STI testing and treatment, condoms, and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) are other critical harm reduction tools and services.

Achieving the goals of harm reduction depends on accessibility of these resources. They, or information about how to find them, need to be available in places like:

  • Community clinics
  • Health departments
  • Churches
  • Public transportation hubs 
  • Food banks
  • Homeless shelters
  • Correctional institutions
  • Community centers
  • Social services offices
  • Mental health facilities
  • Urgent care centers

Does harm reduction encourage people to use drugs?

That’s a common misconception, says Travis Rieder, PhD, MA, an associate research professor at the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics. “Opponents sometimes argue that giving people sterile syringes, clean pipes, naloxone, a space to use drugs under supervision, etc., incentivizes drug use or leads to drug use,” he says. “But people are going to use drugs whether they have these resources or not, and so withholding them doesn’t prevent that use; it just makes it more dangerous. Making an activity more dangerous doesn’t stop people who are committed to engaging in that activity; it just hurts and kills more of them.”

Does harm reduction discourage people from seeking treatment?

On the contrary, says Susan Sherman, PhD ’00, MPH, a professor in Health, Behavior and Society. Harm reduction is “both a social movement and a way to provide services, and it includes drug treatment,” she says. “[Harm reduction] is not only useful in and of itself, but it also brings people into services who may not otherwise come into services.”

Rieder sees harm reduction and addiction treatment as part of the same process. “In my view of harm reduction and treatment, they can be the same thing, because making drug use safer can prevent some of the negative consequences that define an addiction,” he says. “One can take the first steps of recovery while still using drugs fairly chaotically, and continue their road to recovery through small, slow steps that reduce the harms of drug use.”

Why is the need so urgent?

From May 2020 to April 2021, 100,000 people—29% more than May 2019 to April 2020—died of overdose, according to the CDC. The HHS has reported data trending the same way; the rate of overdose fatalities has jumped 250% since 1999.

Why the recent controversy?

In December 2021, with support from President Biden’s American Rescue Plan, SAMHSA announced its Harm Reduction grant program, expected to award $30 million in funding to support harm reduction programs and providers working to make substance use safer and prevent overdose deaths. 

A portion of the funding will be allocated for safe smoking kits, which the White House says include alcohol swabs, lip balm, a rubber mouthpiece, and other “materials to promote hygiene and reduce the transmission of diseases like HIV and hepatitis.” They do not, however, include the physical pipe itself, which has become the object of contention among opposition.

Sherman sees a parallel with previous resistance to syringe services programs. While federal law prohibits the use of federal funding for syringes and clean needles in syringe services programs, “those funds can be used for all other supplies and services” at such programs, she explains. In that way, “crack pipes seem to be the ‘new syringes.’”

 

Morgan Coulson is an editorial specialist on the Communications and Marketing team at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Melissa Hartman is the managing editor of Hopkins Bloomberg Public Health magazine and associate director of editorial at the Bloomberg School.

 

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