• DPMC Moderators: thegreenhand | tryptakid
  • Drug Policy & Media Coverage Welcome Guest
    View threads about
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Drug Busts Megathread Video Megathread

US needs harm-reduction approach to drug use, researcher says

neversickanymore

Moderator: DS
Staff member
Joined
Jan 23, 2013
Messages
30,630
US needs harm-reduction approach to drug use, researcher says

Date:
January 14, 2015

Source:
Rice University

Summary:
The United States' law-and-order approach to reducing the supply of drugs and punishing sellers and users has impeded the development of a public health model that views drug addiction as a disease that is preventable and treatable. A new policy paper advocates that a harm-reduction approach would more effectively reduce the negative individual and societal consequences of drug use.

The United States' law-and-order approach to reducing the supply of drugs and punishing sellers and users has impeded the development of a public health model that views drug addiction as a disease that is preventable and treatable. A new policy paper from Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy advocates that a harm-reduction approach would more effectively reduce the negative individual and societal consequences of drug use.

According to the paper's author, Katharine Neill, the rate of federal inmates incarcerated for drug offenses hovered at just under 50 percent in 2011, and in 2013 the Obama administration's budget asked for $25.6 billion to fight the drug war, $15 billion of which was directed toward law enforcement. In addition, by some estimates, state and local governments spend a combined total of $51 billion per year on drug-related law enforcement efforts, which suggests they have a lot to gain by investing in treatment options, Neill said.
"That law enforcement efforts continue to dominate drug policy highlights the need to reframe the discourse on drug use and addiction," said Neill, the Baker Institute's Alfred C. Glassell III Postdoctoral Fellow in Drug Policy. "While emphasizing the cost-saving benefits of treatment is important, this should be coupled with more public conversations focusing on drug addiction as a disease requiring medical treatment, not politically based solutions. Reframing the issue in this way should increase the likelihood that a public health approach to drug policy will be adopted for the long term."

The paper, "Tough on Drugs: Law and Order Dominance and the Neglect of Public Health in U.S. Drug Policy," is published in the journal World Medical and Health Policy.

Emphasizing harm reduction is a popular public health approach to drugs, Neill said. "A harm-reduction approach recognizes the permanence of drugs in society and, instead of trying to eradicate drug use, focuses on minimizing harm associated with drug use for the individual and society," she said. "This encompasses a variety of objectives, including preventing individuals from using drugs, treating individuals who want to stop using drugs, preventing drug use where it increases the chances of negative outcomes such as driving while on drugs, and helping individuals who want to continue using drugs do so in a way that does not further compromise their health or the health of others." This last objective is often achieved through needle-exchange programs intended to prevent the spread of HIV and hepatitis C and is more controversial than other policies, Neill said.

Harm reduction is multidimensional and can include contradictory objectives, she said. For example, some proponents wish to decriminalize drug use and focus on helping drug users get the resources they need for treatment or to continue to use drugs safely, while others accept the illegality of drug use so long as treatment is more available. Others argue that distinctions should be made between drugs according to the risks they pose to the user and society and that policy should be based on these distinctions. "Still, most advocates of harm reduction agree on some basic tenets, including the view that addiction is a disease requiring medical assistance, the desire to minimize risky behavior without requiring abstinence and the need to protect the public from the consequences of drug use, which includes punishing individuals who commit acts that harm others," Neill said.

Continued here http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/01/150114115601.htm
 
If our society could be honest on drug use we wouldn't have many of our current social issues. The years of drug war propaganda take their toll. I have used many drugs and i have learned honest information of drug effects, risks, and benefits combined with compassionate care of addicts is the solution. Some people might want to be on whatever drug they choose all of their life, this isn't criminal and this is their choice. Others can't survive an addicts life and could benefit from social programs enabling the withdraw from what they use. Harm reduction is working and mass incarceration isn't.
 
Harm reduction methods have proven to work time and time again, since the late teens in the 20th century, not long after the Harrison Act was passed, when the American last heroin maintaince clinic that serviced 1000s of addicts was shut down and the doctor running it incarcerated for his dedication to the responsibilities of his profession and the field of medicine.

Ever since its major introduction into American society in the mid to late 1970s, mass incarceration has proven itself, time and time again, with regard to all possible standards, to have failed.

Too bad such fields have nothing to do with evidence based outcome based practices as they're dictated by a completely disconnect mob of so called citizens at best and by politicians looking out for their own interests and the interests of their backers who couldn't care less about anything but retaining power and making their stay in power an essential part of the status quo.
 
Top