1. Works to minimize the harms associated with certain behaviours (eg. Drug Use, Sex, Partying).
2. Respects the individual's needs and lifestyle choices.
At torontovibe, we use this philosophy when providing information, to help people make healthier choices surrounding drug use -- we neither encourage nor discourage use, rather, we provide factual information for people to make their own decisions.
Harm Reduction: A Detailed Description
Harm Reduction in Principle
Harm reduction is a pragmatic and humanistic approach to diminishing the individual and social harms associated with drug use, especially the risk of HIV infection. It seeks to lessen the problems associated with drug use through methodologies that safeguard the dignity, humanity and human rights of people who use drugs.
This approach is based on the pragmatic acknowledgement that, despite years of trying, there are no known effective interventions for eliminating drug use or drug-related problems in any community, city, or country. In most cultures, adopting a harm reduction approach requires a shift in thinking away from deeply rooted, and understandable, long-term idealistic goals of eliminating drug use and getting all drug users to become drug free.
Harm reduction does not deny the value of helping people become drug free, or the desirability of abstinence as an eventual goal. It simply recognizes that for many drug users these are distant goals, and that services to reduce the risk in the interim are therefore essential if personal and public health disasters are to be avoided. Recognizing the reality of drug use, harm reduction programs measure success in terms of individual and community quality of life and health and not in relation to levels of drug use.
Harm reduction entails a prioritization of goals. Given the high individual and social costs associated with AIDS, measures to prevent the spread of HIV are at the forefront of harm reduction priorities.
Themes in Harm Reduction
Harm Reduction in Practice
Harm reduction uses a range of services to achieve its goals. Needle exchanges and replacement therapy treatment are two effective interventions to reduce drug-related harm. These are often complemented by other supportive services for drug users such as health and drug education, HIV and STD screening, psychological counselling, and medical referrals.
By providing accessible services that meet drug user needs, harm reduction programs often serve as a meaningful point of contact that can connect drug users with other community, medical, and social service resources.