Literature DB >> 27112489

Treating Addictions: Harm Reduction in Clinical Care and Prevention.

Ernest Drucker1,2, Kenneth Anderson3, Robert Haemmig4, Robert Heimer5, Dan Small6, Alex Walley7, Evan Wood8, Ingrid van Beek9.   

Abstract

This paper examines the role of clinical practitioners and clinical researchers internationally in establishing the utility of harm-reduction approaches to substance use. It thus illustrates the potential for clinicians to play a pivotal role in health promoting structural interventions based on harm-reduction goals and public health models. Popular media images of drug use as uniformly damaging, and abstinence as the only acceptable goal of treatment, threaten to distort clinical care away from a basis in evidence, which shows that some ways of using drugs are far more harmful than others and that punitive approaches and insistence on total abstinence as the only goal of treatment often increases the harms of drug use rather than reducing drug use. Therefore the leadership and scientific authority of clinicians who understand the health impact of harm-reduction strategies is needed. Through a review of harm-reduction interventions in Canada, the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, Switzerland, and the Netherlands, we identify three ways that clinicians have helped to achieve a paradigm shift from punitive approaches to harm-reduction principles in clinical care and in drug policy: (1) through clinical research to provide data establishing the effectiveness and feasibility of harm-reduction approaches, (2) by developing innovative clinical programmes that employ harm reduction, and thereby (3) changing the standard of care to include routine use of these evidence-based (but often misunderstood) approaches in their practices. We argue that through promotion of harm-reduction goals and methods, clinicians have unique opportunities to improve the health outcomes of vulnerable populations.

Keywords:  Addiction; Drug policy; Harm reduction; Structural interventions; Substance use

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27112489     DOI: 10.1007/s11673-016-9720-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bioeth Inq        ISSN: 1176-7529            Impact factor:   1.352


  26 in total

Review 1.  Do needle syringe programs reduce HIV infection among injecting drug users: a comprehensive review of the international evidence.

Authors:  Alex Wodak; Annie Cooney
Journal:  Subst Use Misuse       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 2.164

2.  Mortality and HIV transmission among male Vietnamese injection drug users.

Authors:  Vu Minh Quan; Nguyen Le Minh; Tran Viet Ha; Nguyen Phuong Ngoc; Pham The Vu; David D Celentano; Tran Thi Mo; Vivian F Go
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2010-11-04       Impact factor: 6.526

3.  Cost-effectiveness of distributing naloxone to heroin users for lay overdose reversal.

Authors:  Phillip O Coffin; Sean D Sullivan
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2013-01-01       Impact factor: 25.391

4.  Characteristics of an overdose prevention, response, and naloxone distribution program in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County, Pennsylvania.

Authors:  Alex S Bennett; Alice Bell; Laura Tomedi; Eric G Hulsey; Alex H Kral
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 3.671

5.  Overdose prevention and naloxone prescription for opioid users in San Francisco.

Authors:  Lauren Enteen; Joanna Bauer; Rachel McLean; Eliza Wheeler; Emalie Huriaux; Alex H Kral; Joshua D Bamberger
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 3.671

6.  Distinguishing signs of opioid overdose and indication for naloxone: an evaluation of six overdose training and naloxone distribution programs in the United States.

Authors:  Traci C Green; Robert Heimer; Lauretta E Grau
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2008-04-16       Impact factor: 6.526

7.  Opioid overdose prevention with intranasal naloxone among people who take methadone.

Authors:  Alexander Y Walley; Maya Doe-Simkins; Emily Quinn; Courtney Pierce; Ziming Xuan; Al Ozonoff
Journal:  J Subst Abuse Treat       Date:  2012-09-12

8.  Evaluation of the Staying Alive programme: training injection drug users to properly administer naloxone and save lives.

Authors:  Karin E Tobin; Susan G Sherman; Peter Beilenson; Christopher Welsh; Carl A Latkin
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2008-04-22

9.  Community-based opioid overdose prevention programs providing naloxone - United States, 2010.

Authors: 
Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  2012-02-17       Impact factor: 17.586

10.  The changing landscape of opioid prescribing: long-acting and extended-release opioid class-wide Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Gudin
Journal:  Ther Clin Risk Manag       Date:  2012-05-01       Impact factor: 2.423

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  10 in total

1.  Afterthoughts and Foresight: Digging Through Boxes of Bygone Beliefs and Brooding About the Burgeoning of Bioethics.

Authors:  Leigh E Rich
Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 1.352

2.  Life after opioid-involved overdose: survivor narratives and their implications for ER/ED interventions.

Authors:  Luther Elliott; Alex S Bennett; Brett Wolfson-Stofko
Journal:  Addiction       Date:  2019-04-11       Impact factor: 6.526

3.  Structural Competency in the U.S. Healthcare Crisis: Putting Social and Policy Interventions Into Clinical Practice.

Authors:  H Hansen; J Metzl
Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2016-05-13       Impact factor: 1.352

Review 4.  Expanding the continuum of substance use disorder treatment: Nonabstinence approaches.

Authors:  Catherine E Paquette; Stacey B Daughters; Katie Witkiewitz
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2021-11-26

5.  Harm reduction implementation among HIV service organizations (HSOs) in the U.S. south: a policy context analysis and results from a survey of HSOs.

Authors:  Megan C Stanton; Samira B Ali; Katie McCormick
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-07-13       Impact factor: 2.908

6.  Fentanyl and heroin contained in seized illicit drugs and overdose-related deaths in British Columbia, Canada: An observational analysis.

Authors:  Nicholas Baldwin; Roger Gray; Anirudh Goel; Evan Wood; Jane A Buxton; Launette Marie Rieb
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2018-02-20       Impact factor: 4.492

7.  Expanding conceptualizations of harm reduction: results from a qualitative community-based participatory research study with people who inject drugs.

Authors:  L M Boucher; Z Marshall; A Martin; K Larose-Hébert; J V Flynn; C Lalonde; D Pineau; J Bigelow; T Rose; R Chase; R Boyd; M Tyndall; C Kendall
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2017-05-12

8.  Toward a human-centered use of technology: a stakeholder analysis of harm reduction and CBO staff.

Authors:  Ian David Aronson; Alex S Bennett; Robert Freeman
Journal:  Harm Reduct J       Date:  2020-10-19

9.  Principles of Harm Reduction for Young People Who Use Drugs.

Authors:  Simeon D Kimmel; Jessie M Gaeta; Scott E Hadland; Eliza Hallett; Brandon D L Marshall
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2021-01       Impact factor: 7.124

10.  Treatment Outcomes Among Black Adults Receiving Medication for Opioid Use Disorder.

Authors:  Anna Beth Parlier-Ahmad; Mickeal Pugh; Caitlin E Martin
Journal:  J Racial Ethn Health Disparities       Date:  2021-07-12
  10 in total

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