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Overview of Harm Reduction and Sterile Syringe Access

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the good news and bad news. GOOD: New Jersey authorized sterile syringe access! ... Thanks to Drug Policy Alliance New Jersey, Roseanne Scotti, and Meagan Johnson ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overview of Harm Reduction and Sterile Syringe Access


1
Overview of Harm Reduction and Sterile Syringe
Access
Anna Benyo Syringe Access Policy Coordinator Harm
Reduction Coalition New Jersey Syringe Access
Informational ForumFebruary 28th 2007
2
Topics for Today
  • Overview of Harm Reduction
  • Principles and practice
  • National scope of sterile syringe access
  • Opportunities and challenges
  • Harm Reduction Coalition
  • Resources for providers and communities

3
Working Definition of Harm Reduction
  • Harm Reduction
  • A set of practical, public health strategies
    designed to reduce the negative consequences of
    drug use and promote healthy individuals and
    communities.

4
Key Principles of Harm Reduction
  • Designs promotes public health interventions
    that minimize the harmful affects of drug use.
  • Understands drug use as a complex, multi-faceted
    issue that encompasses behaviors from severe
    abuse to total abstinence.
  • Meets people where they are in the course of
    their drug use

5
Key Principles (continued)
  • Ensures that people who use drugs have a real
    voice in the creation of programs.
  • Affirms people who use drugs are the primary
    primary agents of change.
  • Empowers communities to share information and
    support each other

6
Social and Environmental Factors
  • Harm reduction recognizes that the realities of
    poverty, class, racism, social isolation, past
    trauma, sex-based discrimination and other social
    inequalities affect vulnerability to, and
    capacity for, effectively dealing with
    drug-related harm.
  • It does not attempt to minimize the real dangers
    associated with licit and illicit drug use, and
    how those issues impact our lives.

7
Harm Reduction Practice Calls For
  • Non-judgmental, non-coercive provision of
    services
  • Low-threshold program models
  • Resources to people who use drugs

8
Harm Reduction Sterile Syringe Access history
and timeline
  • First started in Holland in response to hepatitis
    B outbreak in the 1980s
  • First legal program in United States started in
    Tacoma, Washington in 1988
  • Rooted in activism and advocacy

9
Goals of Harm Reduction
  • Prevent disease
  • Sterile syringe access to prevent HIV and
    hepatitis
  • Reduce mortality
  • Overdose prevention with training and naloxone
    distribution link to medical care and social
    services
  • Treatment for drug dependence
  • Buprenorphine or Methadone Maintenance
  • Empower communities and reduce stigma
  • Community organizing and engagement

10
Efficacy and Outcomes
  • Syringe access programs are the most effective,
    evidence-based HIV prevention tool for people who
    use drugs
  • Seven federally funded research studies found
    that syringe exchange programs are a valuable
    resource
  • In cities across the nation, people who inject
    drugs have reversed the course of the AIDS
    epidemic by using sterile syringes and harm
    reduction practices.

11
Key points in research syringe exchange does
not
  • Syringe exchange does not encourage drug use
  • Syringe exchange does not increase crime rates
  • Syringe exchange does not increase needlestick
    injuries in the community

12
Syringe Exchange Does.
  • Syringe exchange reduces HIV infection.
  • Syringe exchange reduces risk for hepatitis C
    infection.
  • Syringe exchange programs link participants to
    drug treatment, medical care, housing, and other
    other social services.

13
Injection Drug Use national scope
  • Estimates of current injection drug users in the
    United States range from 354,000 to over 1.3
    million.
  • Injection drug use occurs in every socioeconomic
    and racial/ethnic group and in urban, suburban,
    and rural areas.
  • The majority of injection drug users are men, but
    between ¼ and 1/3 of injection drug users are
    women.

14
The NEED for Syringe Access Harm Reduction
  • Over 8,000 people are newly infected with HIV
    every year due to syringe sharing.
  • Over 15,000 people are newly infected with
    hepatitis C every year due to syringe and
    equipment sharing.
  • Overdose is the nations 2nd leading cause of
    accidental deaths.

15
Demographics
  • African Americans account for over 50 of all
    AIDS cases attributed to injection drug use,
    while Latinos account for nearly 25.
  • Among women, an estimated 61 of AIDS cases are
    due to injection drug use or the result of sexual
    contact with someone who contracted HIV through
    injection drug use.
  • Younger injection drug users generally become
    infected with hepatitis C within two years.

16
Sterile Syringe Access Programs
  • Nearly 200 syringe exchange programs currently
    operate in 38 states, Puerto Rico, Washington DC.
  • Access includes syringe exchange programs,
    over-the-counter pharmacy sales, syringe
    prescriptions, and secondary exchange
    (distribution informally through peer networks)
  • Endorsed by American Medical Association,
    American Public Health Association, US Conference
    of Mayors, among many other legal, medical, and
    policy institutions

17
Syringe exchange program models
  • Storefront
  • Street-based (fixed sites roving sites through
    mobile vans and/or walking teams)
  • Peer and secondary exchange through networks
  • Underground, unauthorized programs (operating
    under the radar)

18
Opportunities and Challenges the good news and
bad news
  • GOODNew Jersey authorized sterile syringe
    access!Improved access to syringe and harm
    reduction methods will benefit individual and
    communities.
  • BAD
  • Federal ban on syringe exchange funding. There
    is no federal funding or national policy for
    syringe exchange.

19
Harm Reduction Coalition (HRC)
  • Education, Training, Technical Assistance,
    andCapacity Building
  • Harm reduction methods and practice
  • HIV prevention in communities of color
  • Sterile syringe access expansion
  • Hepatitis C prevention and awareness
  • Overdose prevention and response
  • Pilot innovative program models -
    Buprenorphine treatment
  • Advocacy, community organizing and policy
  • - national, regional and local levels

20
HRCs Resources
  • National Sterile Syringe Access technical
    assistance to expand syringe access, provide best
    practices, program models, advocacy, and
    training
  • Overdose train service providers, drug users,
    and their friends/family members how to prevent
    and respond to overdoses
  • Hepatitis C provide expert training about
    hepatitis prevention, treatment, and care issues
    specifically designed for active drug users
  • Buprenorphine low-threshold pilot intervention
    to increase access to opiate substitution
    therapies
  • HIV training and capacity building to programs
    working primarily with the African-American
    Community (CDC DEBIs)

21
Contact Information
  • For training information
  • Rebecca Stryjewski
  • 212.213.6376 ext 18
  • stryjewski_at_harmreduction.org
  • For questions about citations or syringe access
  • Anna Benyo
  • Syringe Access Policy Coordinator
  • 212.213.6376 ext 49
  • benyo_at_harmreduction.org
  • Thanks to Drug Policy Alliance New Jersey,
    Roseanne Scotti, and Meagan Johnson
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