Tag: Réduction des méfaits

Transitioning from incarceration to the community: Reducing risks and improving lives of people who use substances

To help incarcerated people who use substances successfully integrate back into their communities, Direction 180 started the Peers Assisting and Lending Support (PALS) program in January 2019 through harm reduction funding from the Public Health Agency of Canada.  Direction 180 is a community-based organization that offers an opioid treatment program in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Pour en savoir plus...

Sites satellites — Réduction des méfaits offerte à partir du domicile de consommateurs de drogues

The term “satellite sites” is used to refer to informal harm reduction hubs operating out of the homes of people who use drugs. Operating in Toronto for more than 20 years, these sites offer access to sterile drug use supplies outside of more formal settings like health centres. Although many satellite sites offer much more than this – including naloxone and overdose response training, needle disposal and referrals to healthcare services. Satellite programs emerged from the recognition that people who use drugs were already doing this work within their communities, operating informally to meet harm reduction needs and respond to a range of other health needs.

Pour en savoir plus...

Gendering the Scene: We need to listen to women and gender-diverse people who use drugs

Over the past several years, Canada has been in the grip of an overdose crisis. We have seen the devastating effects both of a contaminated drug supply and of punitive laws that restrict access of people who use drugs to effective treatment and support. Now we are facing the twin crisis of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, which has radically altered the way we interact with one another and affected the drug supply chain.

Pour en savoir plus...

Il nous faut maintenant plus que jamais un approvisionnement en drogues sécuritaire

La maladie à coronavirus (COVID-19) cause à juste titre beaucoup d’inquiétude chez tous. Mais il existe une autre crise de santé publique qui n’a toujours pas été résolue : la crise des opioïdes. Et si nous n’agissons pas sur-le-champ, la COVID-19 pourrait engendrer deux épidémies chez les personnes qui utilisent des drogues.

Pour en savoir plus...