Vakharia PhD MSW Drug Policy Alliance Agenda • The US Overdose Crisis as a Case Study and Comparison • Stimulant Drugs • Drivers and Solutions • Social Determinants of Health • Public Health, Treatment, Harm Reduction • Why This Moment Calls for Harm Reduction • The Harm Reduction Gap 2 A Crisis in Four Waves Federal Class-wide Scheduling of Fentanyl Analogues COVID-19 80,000 Wave 2 Wave 3 Wave 4. [...] Reduce contact between marginalized people who use stimulants and law enforcement 8 Access to harm reduction and treatment “Our harm reduction playbook was built around opioids” -Shilo Jama, People’s Harm Reduction Alliance Seattle, WA 9 10 11 Access to harm reduction and treatment Stimulant-specific resources and support • “Law of attraction” or “if you build it they will come”; • Culturally-spec. [...] “Twin epidemics” and the interconnectedness between opioids and stimulants7,8,9,10 • Underdosing and lack of access to MOUDs 12 Policies for harm reduction and treatment • Decriminalize and fund all drug using and checking equipment/supplies; -Safer injecting equipment; Safer smoking equipment; Drug-checking equipment • Overdose Prevention Centers (Allowing Smoking); • Expand Evidence-Based Contin. [...] 13 Reduce contact with law enforcement • Decriminalize drugs; • Explore regulatory models and safe supply models, including medication options; • Divest funding from enforcement towards health-promoting options; • Medical and mental health first responders to emergencies/overdoses; and • Invest in community-building and response to crisis. [...] 5) 16 Why Harm Reduction? 1/3 Thinking beyond binaries – “either/or” • Drug use occurs on a continuum • Not all use is problematic – Use is not “abuse” • Use can vary from drug to drug; day to day • Harm is relative Solution-oriented, creative, and nimble • Drugs carry risk; risks can be reduced • Many potential areas to intervene and help • Even occasional and social users can be helped 17 Why Ha.
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Table of Contents
- Slide 1: Harm Reduction Saving Lives During Crises 1
- Slide 2: Agenda 2
- Slide 3: A Crisis in Four Waves 3
- Slide 4: Stimulant Drugs 4
- Slide 5: People Use Stimulants for Reasons 5
- Slide 6: Social Determinants of Health and Risk Environments 6
- Slide 7: Policy Solutions for SDoH and Risk Environments 7
- Slide 8: Policy proposals to reduce stimulant-related harms must: 8
- Slide 9: Access to harm reduction and treatment 9
- Slide 10 10
- Slide 11 11
- Slide 12: Access to harm reduction and treatment 12
- Slide 13: Policies for harm reduction and treatment 13
- Slide 14: Reduce contact with law enforcement 14
- Slide 15: Leading with Harm Reduction 15
- Slide 16: What is Harm Reduction? 16
- Slide 17: Why Harm Reduction? 1/3 17
- Slide 18: Why Harm Reduction? 2/3 18
- Slide 19: Why Harm Reduction 3/3 19
- Slide 20: The Harm Reduction Gap 20
- Slide 21 21
- Slide 22: References 22
- Slide 23: References 23
- Slide 24: THANK YOU 24