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Download Day 1 Session 6 Harm Reduction
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1 Drug-Related Harms… Physical Harms • Infections – local (abscess), systemic (HIV) • Poor nutrition, debility, weight loss • Overdose, death Occupational / Financial Harms • Absenteeism from work • Frequent changes of job, loss of job • Losses suffered/debts incurred 2 Familial / Social Harms • Marital disharmony, separation/divorce • Loss of reputation, social outcast • Stigma and discrimination Psychological Harms • Guilt/shame, lack of motivation • Depression, anxiety • Other mental disorders Legal Harms • Involvement in illegal activities • Arrests, imprisonment • Drug dealing (NDPS Act) How Can One Possibly Reduce These Harms? Let us do some brain mapping on this issue… 3 Drug Abuse Management Strategies 4 Supply Reduction Strategies To disrupt the supply and availability of drugs Demand Reduction Strategies Aim to reduce the desire to use drugs and to prevent, reduce or delay the initiation of drug use Harm Reduction Strategies Aim to reduce the negative impact of drug use and drug-related activities on individuals and communities Contd… Drug Abuse Management Strategies Supply Reduction Strategies Aim to disrupt the supply and availability of drugs Regulated supply of legal drugs • Alcohol only for certain people, in certain settings • Medications available only through prescriptions Total prohibition of illegal drugs • Seizures of drug(s); punishment to drug dealers 5 Contd… Drug Abuse Management Strategies Demand Reduction Strategies Aim to reduce the desire to use drugs and to prevent, reduce or delay the initiation of drug use Primary prevention • Aimed at young people to discourage initiation of drug use Treatment • Identification of drug users; providing effective treatment for them 6 What is ‘Harm Reduction’? “Policies, programs and practices that aim primarily to reduce the adverse health, social and economic consequences of drug use without necessarily reducing drug consumption.” Means ‘reducing harm from drugs even more important than reducing drug consumption’ More effective: • Seeks to achieve realistic, sub-optimal objectives rather than setting, fail-to-reach, utopian goals • ‘80% of something > 100% of nothing’ 7 Why Harm Reduction? Why not eliminate all forms of drug use from the society? 8 Why Can’t Drugs be Eliminated? Substance use has been part of human society from the very beginning ‘Zero Tolerance’ based strategies such as Legal prohibition of substances Abstinence-oriented treatment have not been able to eliminate substance use Making a drug illegal may even increase the harms associated with its use through marginalization and criminalization of drug users 9 A drug free society: impossible to achieve As a result… • There will always be some people using drugs • Among these users • Some may not be willing to give up drug use altogether • Many others may have tried but failed • All such drug using individuals are at continued risk of drug-related harms • Harm reduction provides an alternative to deal with these individuals 10 Strategies for Reducing Drugrelated Harms Educational Interventions • How to reduce risk • Safer methods of drug use Needle syringe exchange programmes Substitution, e.g. Methadone, Buprenorphine Other strategies, e.g. injecting rooms 11 This entire package = ‘harm reduction’ Let us rank the harm-reduction strategies! 12 IDU Risk Reduction Through Education Reduce number of sharers Continue injecting with cleaned needles Continue injecting with sterile needles Substitution – agonist medicines Shift to illicit but noninjecting drug 13 Stop drug use SAFER OPTIONS Education on Risky Sexual Behaviours No sex! One faithful partner Minimum number of partners 14 Consistent condom use STD / HIV testing and treatment Principles of Harm Reduction Recognizes the intrinsic value and dignity of all human beings Focuses on health concerns Seeks to minimize repressive measures or attributed criminalization of drug use Does not judge drugs or drug use, views the issue objectively and seeks to reduce associated harms Encourages safer drug use Recognizes the competency of individuals to make choices that will change their lives in a positive way Challenges conventional drug policies and their consequences 15 THANK YOU! 16