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Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy | ||||
Canadian Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs | ||||
Volume 2 - Policies and Practices In Canada |
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Chapter 16 - PreventionRisk
reduction and harm reduction
The harm reduction approach has
become a preferred tool in preventing AIDS/HIV contamination through
intravenous drug use. It was discovered in the late 1980s that IV drug users
were a key vector for the transmission of HIV. Needle exchange programs came
about as a result. However, the harm reduction approach
creates a number of conceptual and theoretical problems. The first problem is
terminology. “Harm reduction” is the term most commonly used in English, but
“risk reduction” is also sometimes used. In French, “harm reduction” has been
rendered as “réduction des méfaits”,
but also as “réduction des dommages”
and “réduction des risques”. Further, the concept and practice of
harm reduction have been criticized by some observers who see them as veiled
strategies for legalizing drugs. When
I say a ‘harm reduction drug policy,’ I do not mean as we have already
initiated in the response to drugs so far. We have tried many things such as
needle exchanges and we have tried a harm reduction approach to drinking and
driving. I have developed many programs for youth, which is my specialty. If I
were called upon to develop a program to teach youth with any certainty about
how to use drugs that are now illegal in a safe and moderate way, I do not
think I could do so. Drugs fundamentally have effects. They do affect us. For
example, it may be the cleanest heroin in the world, but is the person
functioning in the family and at work, and are they able to pay for the habit
that they will develop? Those are questions that need to be answered. When
I use the term, I mean harm reduction as it has been promoted. The term has
become sullied, unfortunately. It began as a noble thing, but has become a key
code word for decriminalization or legalization of substances. I would caution
you against using the term as it is. [1][41] Granted, harm reduction strategies
are often on a collision course with law enforcement strategies: the situation
has arisen often in cities across Canada where heroin addicts leaving needle
exchange clinics come face to face with police. The term “harm reduction” refers
more specifically to strategies aimed at reducing the adverse effects of drug
use on health, economic status and the social environment for users and those
around them.[2][42]
In addition to needle exchange, harm reduction strategies for drug users
include such measures as prescription methadone for heroin addicts, medically
supervised prescription heroin programs and “safe injection rooms”, or clinics
where no prescription is required.
Canadian stakeholders agree that these measures are underdeveloped in
Canada. Health Canada recently announced that a prescription heroin program would
be tested in three major cities. The number of methadone places is said to be
insufficient. Moreover, there are no safe injection rooms. What are the implications of a harm
reduction strategy for cannabis? What applications might there be for such a
strategy? Harm reduction strategies related to heroin, for example, have been
based on knowledge of some of the harmful effects of injecting the drug: HIV
and hepatitis C for users (needle exchange programs), unsanitary conditions and
risk of violence in places where the drug is injected (safe injection rooms),
and petty property crime to get money to buy drugs (prescription heroin). In
order to develop harm reduction strategies, we therefore have to know at least
something about the ways the drug is used and its direct and indirect harmful
effects. What are the harmful effects of cannabis? We identified some of those harmful
effects in Chapters 7 and 8. They include:
Based on this knowledge, harm
reduction strategies could be developed for cannabis:
Obviously, like harm reduction
strategies for other drugs, these tools are based on recognition of use and an
approach that does not call for abstinence. We know full well that these two
points may elicit strong reactions from those who believe that cannabis is
fundamentally dangerous and may put us at odds with the current legal context. |