Harm reduction programs and policy in Australia: barriers and enablers to effective implementation

Author:

O’Keefe Daniel12,Ritter Alison3,Stoove Mark12,Hughes Chad12,Dietze Paul12

Affiliation:

1. Burnet Institute

2. School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University

3. Drug Policy Modelling Program, Social Policy Research Centre, University of New South Wales

Abstract

Abstract. Background: Harm reduction is an integral component of Australia’s overall national drug policy. Harm reduction policy and interventions can be applied to any legal or illegal drug to mitigate harm without necessarily reducing use, but harm reduction is traditionally conceptualised in relation to injecting drug use. Early and comprehensive adoption of many innovative harm reduction interventions has meant that Australia has had significant success in reducing a number of drug related harms, avoided disease epidemics experienced in other countries, and established programs and practices that are of international renown. However, these gains were not easily established, nor necessarily permanent. Aim: In this paper we explore the past and present harm reduction policy and practice contexts that normalised and facilitated harm reduction as a public health response, as well as those converse contexts currently creating opposition to additional or expanded interventions. Importantly, this paper discusses the intersection between various interventions, such as needle and syringe distribution and drug treatment programs. Finally, we detail some of the practical lessons that have been learned via the Australian experience, with the hope that these lessons will assist to inform and improve international harm reduction implementation.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference96 articles.

1. Australia Government Minister for Health (2019). press release: $268 Million to continue the battle against alcohol and drug misuse, available at: https://www.greghunt.com.au/268-milli on-to-continue-the-battle-against-alcohol-and-drug-misuse/. Canberra: Author.

2. Australian Government Department of Health. (2017). National Drug Strategy 2017–2026. Canberra, Australia: Department of Health.

3. Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. (2009). Return on investment 2: Evaluating the cost-effectiveness of needle and syringe programs in Australia. Canberra: Author.

4. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2019). Alcohol and other drug treatment services in Australia 2017–18. Drug treatment series no. 33. Cat. no. HSE 230. Canberra: Author.

5. The ACT heroin trial: intellectual, practical and political challenges

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