Harm reduction
More conference reports at:
www.drinkanddrugsnews.com
It’s not enough to
just present the
evidence... you
have to engage
with the values and
morals of those
who oppose you
Let ’s get radicaL
Harm reduction measures can be seen as controversial within
the wider population, but isn’t confronting public fears an
essential stage in moving the agenda on? DDN reports
‘HOW RADICAL CAN HARM REDUCTION BE?’ asked Dr
Ingrid van Beek at the City health 2016 conference in
London. Van Beek was part of the team that
established what still remains Australia’s only drug
injecting facility, in King’s Cross, Sydney in 2001. The
fact that no other Australian facilities have been set
up in the last 15 years makes the King’s Cross site
appear more radical than it really is, she argued.
The site was chosen as there was a large amount
of street use in the area, and was established as an
extension of needle exchange services. While these
services are now seen as mainstream, with more than
90 countries providing needle exchanges, establishing
safe clinical settings for people to inject drugs is still
sometimes seen as ‘a step too far’.
‘What did you think was happening with all the
needles being given out?’ was a question van Beek had
asked politicians and local residents also opposed the
scheme. Lobbying against a backdrop of cheap heroin,
rising drug-related deaths, and an increasing amount
of visible street users, she had finally persuaded
politicians to confront the problem and agree a trial
period for the new facility.
Despite the scheme being the most evaluated
medical facility in the world, with its positive
outcomes in reducing both fatal overdose and street
use validated by independent assessment, its trial
status remained for nine years before it finally became
a permanent service.
It’s not enough to just present the evidence, van
Beek told delegates – you also have to engage with the
values and morals of those who oppose it. Shutting it
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would ultimately have resulted in an increase in
overdose deaths, something that opponents needed to
be reminded of. ‘I think we should keep people alive,
and make no apology for it’, she said.
Harm reduction facilities are never more needed
than in times of austerity – but unfortunately the
short-term costs could prohibit establishing these
interventions, said Dr Konstantinos Farsalinos, of the
Onasis Cardiology Centre in Greece. Providing
delegates with a perspective on Greece since the
financial crisis, Farsalinos talked of the massive
reduction of GDP and huge increase in
unemployment, which had especially hit young people
and the poor, and had seen an associated rise in drug
and alcohol use, accompanied by more cases of bloodborne viruses and mental health issues.
One of the problems was that effectiveness of
harm reduction services could often only be proven
over the long term. Coupled with a lack of public
sympathy for some client groups, this could make it
hard to secure initial funding, said Farsalinos.
Professor Neil McKeganey of the Centre for
Substance Use Research urged caution around seeing
harm reduction as a universal panacea. Interventions
should be limited by both evidence of cost effectiveness
over a long term, and also the moral and political
limitations required by the wider population, he said.
Harm reduction was not a call to arms but an
important societal movement, said McKeganey, and it
was important that it was judged with the same critical
measures used on any other health intervention.
One of the main challenges according to Jamie
Why wait for the death toll
to rise, asks Nigel Brunsdon
With overdose deaths recorded every week in
the UK, safer spaces were disappearing fast but
needed more than ever, Nigel Brunsdon told the
National Substance Misuse Conference,
Breaking down barriers.
Needle exchanges were closing all over the
country and transferring to pharmacies, and the
lack of political will to open consumption rooms
in the UK made no sense: ‘There have been zero
deaths in them anywhere in the world, and
they’ve been open since 1986,’ he said. Slowing
slides of filthy and unhygienic spaces full of
needle litter, close to where the conference was
being held, he added ‘Birmingham has an
overdose fatality every week’.
Beyond reducing deaths, the facilities were also
shown to reduce blood-borne viruses and
increase access to treatment, housing and other
forms of engagement.
‘We have the highest levels of drug use ever and
many people who’ve never been in treatment,’
he said. ‘So why aren’t drug services clamouring
to do this?’
More reports from the NSM conference in next
month’s issue.
Bridge, of the International Drug Policy Consortium,
was that ‘people who use drugs are now widely seen
as criminals, not as people who need support’.
Campaigns such as Support. Don’t Punish were
proving successful at bringi