Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Harm Reduction
Episode Date: March 9, 2021There are simple, common-sense ways we can save the lives of injection drug users. The United States is woefully behind in adopting these best practices and there are some who are fighting to keep it ...that way.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers
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Alright, talk is about books.
One, two, one, two, three, four. Hello everybody and welcome to Saubone's, Mayor Deltour of Miscite Admedicine. for the mouth.
Hello, everybody, and welcome to Saul Bones, a marital turf,
misguided medicine.
I'm your co-host, Justin McElroy.
And I'm Sydney McElroy.
And I am so excited to be here with you,
since recording another great episode of Saul Bones.
Me too, Justin.
I'm excited to do this.
I'm going to kind of launch into our episode
a little quicker than we normally do.
Okay.
Because it's an important
one.
And there's a lot.
It was one of those moments where I finished preparing the whole episode and then thought
this should have been like a series.
But I think we'll look at this as like a general overview of the topic, and there are lots
of other little alleys that I've found that we can go down to explore more in depth in
the future. But this is sort of a general overview of something that is really relevant to me and to
a lot of our community here where we live.
But I am certain there are other places all over the country who are dealing with this
same struggle right now that we are not alone in that, but I know it is very relevant
right here. Before you get into it, can you talk for just in that, but I know it is very relevant right here.
Before you get into it, can you talk for just a couple of minutes about why it is your connection to it?
Well, first of all, what we are going to be talking about is harm reduction.
Before I get into the episode, can I give a huge thank you to Luca, who helped a listener,
who reached out to say that if I was going to do an episode like this,
he is an expert and has a wealth of knowledge on the subject and would be happy to provide
any support I needed and was just instrumental in the creation of this episode.
So thank you, thank you, thank you, Luca.
This episode of Sobans would not exist without you.
Thanks, Luca.
So thank you.
Harm reduction is
First of all, do you know what it is Justin before I launch into why I know what it is but probably thinking of
It's like need to exchange programs, right? Like that's what most people kind of think of yes
Is that term in in distaste now? Is that a less?
What you just said I'm glad that's what you said,
because I think that's what most people envision
when they hear this term.
If they've heard it, that's what they envision
is that concept, needle exchange.
I would say that exchange is not the right word,
but that's gonna be part of the conversation,
so that's fine.
We're gonna get into why that's not the best description,
but I think a lot of people just envision some sort of place where you go and get
clean needles. Okay. Right. Right. That's the idea. The reason that harm reduction is so important
to our community at this moment is that we do have a harm reduction program in Huntington.
And right now, the West Virginia state legislature
has a lot of people, not all of the legislators,
but a specific party and many of that party's members
are quite invested in stopping harm reduction programs.
They have not introduced legislation to ban them,
which has been attempted in the past.
And there are states where you just can't do harm reduction period, at least when needles
are involved.
That has not been introduced, but to sort of regulate them out of existence, if that makes
sense.
We are going to put so many stipulations on the creation of these programs and involve so many people at different levels of government and within the community to sign off on them
before they're allowed to exist that we know will destroy all the harm reduction programs
in the state.
Now, at this moment, as we're recording, some of the legislation has been watered down
through tireless efforts of public health advocates in our community.
Some of it has been watered down so that I don't think it will completely destroy all the
harm reduction programs in the state. But assuming it does pass, they will definitely be hampered
and probably therefore less effective. And certainly, some may close as a result of this.
And that, as a doctor for me, is atrocious
because as we're gonna talk about harm reduction programs,
work, they save lives, and they're evidence-based.
They're good medicine, they're good science.
They're the right thing to do scientifically,
they're the right thing to do from a human perspective.
And so, all of your arguments against it
are usually based on a misunderstanding of what it is.
If you're in the medical field,
you hear harm reduction and you immediately think
of these programs largely aimed at people
who use injection drugs.
And we're trying to use measures
to avoid the negative consequences
of using injection drugs.
Things like bloodborne infections, like HIV or hepatitis,
an overdose, other sorts of infections
that you can get from reusing needles
that haven't been properly cleaned
in between that kind of thing.
Harm reduction programs are specifically aimed
at mitigating those sorts of adverse effects.
But you practice harm reduction in your daily life constantly.
Maybe you do.
I live like I'm dying.
Like Tim McGraw told me to.
I'm out there every day.
All risk.
No reward.
Well, I don't think that's true.
Sorry. Do you see this parachute that I've dragged
into the room that's still connected in my back? I didn't even learn how to take it off.
That's because I don't, I don't, I'm all risk. I parachute it in here to record this
episode. Well, you know, you use that as an example and this is kind of extreme, but when you jump
out of an airplane with a parachute, the reason you wear the parachute
is to reduce the risk of harm
from jumping out of an airplane.
Now, they trick me into wearing it.
I wasn't gonna do it.
This is sort of extreme because most people,
if they didn't have a parachute,
just wouldn't jump out of a plane, right?
Like, given the option.
Most people.
But so let's use a more commonplace example.
Do you drive a car or ride in a car?
Have you been in a car? Yeah, I've been in a car. That is moving. You a car or ride in a car? Have you been in a car?
Yeah, I've been in a car.
That is moving.
You know I've been in a car.
Riding in cars, driving cars,
it's one of the most risky behaviors you can engage in, right?
Sure.
You look statistically.
Yes.
Rex happened all the time.
Okay, good.
It is a risk you take.
Thanks, generalizing side of this word over here.
Pile it on, come on, Sid, what else you got?
My point is, you have the option of never being in a car.
You could do that.
It would probably greatly limit your quality of life.
Yeah, you can go to Arbise.
Yeah, there are lots of things you can't do.
Depending on where you live, if you don't have a car, if you can't drive a car, now
if you don't have a car, if you won't ride in one, if you, or a bus, or any sort of moving vehicle, right?
So we do things to reduce the harm of that.
We wear seatbelts, we have airbags.
Cars are held to certain safety standards.
We have traffic laws.
We have all kinds of things in place.
We wear masks.
Right?
Yes.
Yes, wearing a mask is a way of harming.
Yeah, but sure. No, but wearing a mask is a way to mitigate a risk.
Because you could just lock yourself in a closet for the duration of the pandemic.
And that would be safer.
Sunscreen.
You don't have to go out in the sun.
You could just not go out in the sun, but you do when you wear sunscreen.
Knee pads are helmets for our kids, like riding bikes, playing sports.
Every time a kid engages in one of those activities,
there's a risk of harm, but we still let them.
We have life jackets.
These are all harm reduction.
These are all things we do, right?
Right.
Even that weird stuff that you could drink
before you got drunk so that you wouldn't have a hangover.
Remember that that was advertised for a while on TV?
Do you beer?
No, the thing that you were supposed to take first
and then you wouldn't get a hangover?
Oh, yeah, yeah, I forget the name.
I don't remember what it was, but like, I don't think,
that, I mean, that didn't work, but like, the point is,
it's the same thing, like, you could just not drink so much
that you got hungover, but okay, instead, I guess,
you're gonna use that.
Anyway, my point is, we all do things that reduce harm
and this is the same idea that, you know, there are
things we can do for people who use injection drugs, things they can do to reduce the risk
of harm coming from it.
There's also like the larger issue, because we're going to talk about this, the development
of harm reduction has had sort of like two different phases.
There was the initial idea of like the individual human who uses injection drugs.
How can we prevent harm from coming to them in the best way possible?
How can we reduce the risk, I should say, of harm coming to them?
But then there was this sort of like second wave of like the public health benefit from this, right?
Which is why you see a lot of harm reduction programs tied to health departments who are
concerned not just with your individual health and safety, but with the broader concept of
the public health at large, right?
And I mean, this is a very valid thing, especially if you're talking to policymakers, you have
to bring in all these points,
you have to bring all this evidence to the table,
as to why harm reduction is so important,
not just for the individual human,
but for the community at large.
All of those things really speak to the people
who get to write the laws,
and the people who write the checks,
because there's a money saving argument here.
As a doctor, that's not really where my concern lies.
My concern lies with the patient and the person,
and I think a lot of people involved in harm reduction
would argue passionately that that has to be
where it all comes from.
The root has to be, how can I help you human,
preserve your dignity, your autonomy,
your right to make decisions for yourself,
but also reduce the harm that will come to you, you know, as much as possible.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
But both of these things come into play when we're trying to argue about how to maintain
these programs.
We're going to start back.
Remember we did a whole episode about the origin of the hypodarmic needle.
Yeah.
Okay.
And Christopher Ren got a dog high.
Do you remember that? needle. Yeah. Okay. And Christopher Ren got a dog high.
Do you remember that?
Right, yeah.
I'm in.
Is that, I've read like, was this the first injection drug use?
I don't know.
The first time that somebody, I don't know.
It wasn't long after we had like real what we think of today
as a hypodarmic needle.
There were lots of from Christopher Ren,
they were in between then and 1858,
there were a lot of other things introduced that were similar.
But all we think of today as like something to inject,
something really came from around 1858.
And soon after it was introduced,
as we talked about in that episode,
we started to have concerns about people using them
and using
psychoactive substances, things that can make you high when they shouldn't or
You know from the medical perspective when it was unnecessary and there were already things as early as the 1860s
You started to see concern about like oh well not only I
Treated that person with morphine for a certain period of time,
but now they seem to be continuing to use morphine.
You know, I haven't diagnosed them with anything.
There was this concern arising,
but then there was also cases of like transmission
of smallpox from reusing a needle, tetanus,
rusty syringes, causing problems and infections.
So like all of this, as soon as the needle existed
harms that can come from the needle arose. And this is true for any new piece of technology.
You find something, it's great, it works, and then you realize like, oh, oops,
it does all this other stuff. Fossil fuels, for instance. This is great. We have energy.
Look at this. I burn this rock. It's very forever. I love it.
Oops. Everybody, come get these.
And so then you realize like, okay, there's some harm.
So like, this is not unique to the needle, everything.
You don't realize, I think, sometimes until you put it out there,
like, okay, there's some stuff we didn't anticipate.
And you got a troubleshoot.
So originally, using injection drugs was not illegal, right?
And you could use morphine or heroin eventually at home.
Like that's fine, there was no law against it.
There were laws that were passed to try to limit
the prescribing by doctors.
Initially, they were kind of targeted on that end of it.
Like, well, let's tax these things, let's regulate these things on the doctor end, on the
prescriber, on the pharmacist end, on the people who are providing the substances.
Let's try to control the supply on that end, but the drugs were not like criminalized,
right?
Now, when you look into, when did these things become criminalized?
What we're really talking about, like many things, it's tied to racism, cultural stigma,
a fear, a racialized fear.
Very much tied to let's make white people afraid of these drugs by associating these drugs
with people who aren't white.
That was very much the sort of the origins of when all this stuff was criminalized.
In the early 1900s, the move to make opium first illegal was very much tied to prejudice against Chinese
Americans. And there were a lot of like stories and and this whole fear that all these white women, especially,
were running away with and leaving their husbands for Chinese men because they had the opium.
And there was this whole big fear that they're stealing white women.
This story is so old in American history.
Like you just hear it again and again, whatever
race we want to demonize.
But there was this idea because so many women were prescribed, lodinum opium for, quote,
unquote, female troubles, that they were, many of them did develop an addiction to that
substance.
And so then would seek it out if they weren't getting it from a doctor. And so they played upon those fears to, you know, make everybody
afraid of Chinese Americans and opium. Then they did the same thing with cocaine and black
Americans. There were many stories of like you get these wild ideas that cocaine gave
black men superhuman strength.
And that's why we need to, yes,
that's why we need to limit it is because
we're making black men too strong with our cocaine
and they can do anything.
And then again, tied to the fears of,
I mean, what we're doing is weaponizing white women
and they're safety at this point.
And that's what all of this was about.
Marijuana was very much tied to Mexican Americans.
That's where that, I mean, all of these were very racist
in their origin.
This is why these drugs are bad.
Look at who they came from or who uses them.
This was all this conversation when the Harrison Act
was passed in 1914.
And this addressed opiate specifically,
this is where this kind of starts.
It addressed opiate specifically in a way
that has ramifications to this day.
Okay, so in this milieu of all this racist fear
about drugs, the Harrison Act comes up
and basically opium at this point was considered an international problem.
Everybody was freaking out, like on an international level, what are we going to do about OPM?
How do we stop it?
How do we get everybody to stop using it?
And so there was this international OPM commission in Shanghai in 1909, the US of course
sent delegates.
And after that, they would play their part in like sort of how do we regulate it?
Well, let's tax it.
Let's make it harder to get OPM two people.
That was the idea of the Harrison Act.
And it got a lot of support because of all these stories
that I, you know, that I just talked about.
But the thing about the Harrison Act
is that the way that it was worded, it didn't allow doctors to prescribe opiate specifically for addiction.
And up until then, that was commonplace. Like you might have someone who you treated with morphine for something painful. That painful condition resolved, they no longer had it, but the patient still came
to you to get morphine because at that point it was addiction. And the doctor would prescribe it.
That would be okay. That was unacceptable. Well, we know the negative consequences of withdrawal,
so we'll continue to prescribe it. The Harrison Act, the way it was worded,
made it so that that was a criminal act.
This is still, I mean, this is still the case outside
of very well regulated, very tightly controlled things
like methadone and suboxone and things like that.
I can't have someone come to me and say,
listen, I was given Norco or Percussetta or whatever for this, whatever
broken bone I had.
The bone is healed.
It's all better now, but I'm addicted to it now, and I would like you to keep prescribing
it to me.
I can't do that.
Is that, forgive my ignorance, you're deeper in this than I am.
Is that a bad thing?
Well, here's what I would say.
If we did...
Because I know that doctors prescribe a lot of painkillers
that people don't need for similar,
like an addiction is definitely a part of that.
Like, is it a bad thing that they can't prescribe?
Like, I would say that...
Injection drugs due to addiction?
Yeah, I would say that it is as a blanket statement.
I mean, I think there's a ton of nuance here.
I don't think this is something you could just say.
There's no room for that on sob and I'm not sending any,
I guess or no, please.
You have to remove the moralistic part from it.
And this is the same idea with things like methodone or suboxone.
If taking this prevents all of the negative,
all of the harm that can come from seeking to use substances in an illegal setting.
If you can find a way to do that legally, we have plenty of scientific evidence that tells us the patient's quality of life and quantity of life is longer.
That the patient, that less harm comes to the patient in that scenario.
So then why would it be bad?
Well, because we're getting into areas where people feel like they have a strong moral grounding
to make one argument or the other.
And I think you have to remove it from the conversation.
But anyway, this Harrison act is really, as we move forward through like the history of harm reduction
in various parts of the world, this is a breaking point. And this is why the US has been so far behind
in so many ways, like as an entity, the United States of America, not specific people, because
there, as always, grassroots activists step in when there is a void.
But as a country from the top down, we have been behind for a very long time because I mean,
this is really where it starts.
And we wouldn't catch up for quite a while, which I'm going to talk to you about.
Oh, okay, go ahead.
But first we got to go to the building department.
Let's see, Nick.
Let's go.
The medicines, the medicines that I you let my car be for the mouth.
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All right, Sidney, if I remember correctly,
the US was about to come roaring back
and make up the lost ground to other nations and become a world leader in harm reduction, right?
No, no, none of that is true.
I do want to briefly tell you in this same period of time as you look through like all the
way up until the 1960s, that was really the idea that we should do literally anything
about this as like as like a concerted like
policy-making government body thing. Again, I'm not talking about individuals. There were
individuals who were trying to address these things all along. They just had no government
support in doing so. But it was really the 60s before we even start to catch up. And the 80s
before anything big starts to happen
into the early 90s.
Meanwhile, in other parts of the world, people were doing things.
In the UK, police officers recognized pretty early that arrest scene and putting people in jail
for having drugs or using drugs didn't really help anyone.
Like, what are we even doing?
What is the point?
And so there was this concept of simple cautions,
which is sort of a like, shake your finger
and say, don't do that again, kind of thing.
As opposed to like developing the stigmatizing
criminal record against somebody
because they were caught with some drugs.
And as far back as 1926, you have doctors prescribing opiates for, I mean, the same
way we would think of like methadone or suboxone today for a medical therapy, yeah, in the
UK, with the Roelston report. And I mean, again, 1926. So all of this stuff that in the
US, you couldn't do, they never stopped doing in the UK. Another big step forward was in Mercyside,
which is like the county where,
I say where Liverpool is because,
see, the thing about Americans is,
we don't really know geography.
So you gotta give us like something we can tie to
like a pop culture reference.
It's an air, it's an air-liver pool.
Liverpool, like the Beatles.
It's really a level of howlins, the Beatles.
Yeah, you know, the Beatles Liverpool. He best is from
If you don't give us that way and that's true for our geography too, by the way
We don't know United States geography either. Yeah, like it's not it's not
It's not a nationalist thing. That's true. Americans just don't know geography
Um, there's a lot of states in there that if they started moving on tomorrow
I would have no idea
Yeah I the girls wanted to go to Omaha, Nebraska because that's where There's a lot of states in there that if they started moving on tomorrow, I would have no idea. Yeah.
The girls wanted to go to Omaha, Nebraska because that's where Jersey was from.
They watched all these videos about the magical world of Omaha, Nebraska.
And they had this map and they wanted me to show where Omaha, Nebraska was.
And friends, I'm here to tell you it took a little bit of doing.
Until I came to Omaha, Nebraska on a map.
I'm not proud of doing. Okay, the old Oma on Nebraska on a map.
I'm not proud of that.
Certainly a few had to point out some other interesting things
on the way as an Ola, there's a green canyon,
because while I stall for time,
I'm like, it's got to be on here somewhere, please Oma, please.
I always get mad when I see those maps that they are like,
look, it's somebody from outside the US who tried to fill
in a map of all the states.
And it's like, do that to some of us.
We can't do it either.
That's not fair.
Do like Europe.
Just like the nations.
Well, yeah, well, heck yeah, we don't know the nations,
but we don't know our states.
And we live here.
Freakin' star, Italy's a boot beyond that.
The point is moot.
That's my little, that's my little,
mnemonic device I use for remembering,
remembering European nations.
Oh, you're gonna, I'm gonna get emails about that. I just can't remember at all. remembering, remembering European nations. Oh, you're going to, I'm going to get emails about that.
I just can't remember at all folks. I'm sorry. I'm, I'm, I'm, this is self-critical.
I'm not bragging. All right. Well, I want to talk about how great this was in Liverpool.
Okay. And, and, and Mercyside. So there was a huge increase in heroin use in the 1980s,
lots of places, but specifically in Liverpool,
in this part of England, okay?
The local public health authorities were worried,
as were a lot of activists in the community
of people who used drugs,
but also people who were worried about,
everyone was worried about the same thing at this point, HIV.
The worry was with more people using this heroin,
are we gonna see an outbreak of HIV?
So they developed what would be,
what would eventually become known
as the mercy model of harm reduction.
And it's really a huge sort of cornerstone.
Like if you think about the things we do today
that are harm reduction,
a lot of the principles come from this.
And the idea was like,
if we have all these activists within the drug
using population who are talking about what they, you know, what they see is the issues,
the barriers, what they need. And then you combine that with like public health officials,
doctors, nurses, you know, healthcare workers, which were always the hardest, especially the doctors,
were hard, some of the hardest people to engage in this process, along with the community at large and the police,
and you can get everybody to buy in
to sort of a non-judgmental set of goals.
How can we address this issue, specifically about HIV,
but the wider issue of people are using drugs.
They're not gonna stop using drugs,
so how can we reduce the harm to the people who use drugs?
Right?
So the focus was really on safe needle practices
to prevent the spread of HIV.
There were secondary goals,
like let's also offer a methadone treatment
if somebody wants to do that.
Let's offer that at the same time.
And there were things like you could engage with programs
to abstain from drugs completely if that was your goal.
All of that was offered, but that's not really the goal.
The goal is not we will draw you in, and I think a lot of people get that impression,
like the whole goal of a harm reduction program is to draw people in with needles that have
already been cleaned, and so they can inject more safely.
But once we get them there, we're going to convince them to stop using drugs.
That's not the goal of harm reduction.
I'm not saying that that can't happen, and certainly it does, but that's not why it's
there.
It's there for the person who is using drugs to reduce the harm to themselves when they
inject drugs.
That's what it's there for.
And in this specific instance,
HIV was the biggest thing they were focused on.
The barrier was low for entry,
the staff were trained specifically in non-judgmental,
which gosh, I mean, if you think about like this
is back in the 80s and they're training people
on the non-judgmental approach to people who use drugs.
And we're still not there today.
That's why you ahead of work.
Yeah, in so many places.
The result was that a lot more people
came in to seek medical attention generally
who had not been to doctors in years
because they were scared.
They didn't want to go to doctor.
They know what the doctors are going to say.
Stop doing drugs.
Stop doing drugs. That's your problem.
They're not going to address any of it.
They're just going to tell them to stop. by the way when we're talking about abstaining from things as the only option
I think we have another great model for when you just tell people to abstain from something and don't give them any other
Information or education or help how well does that work?
You know, it's funny said I joked about not joke but I mentioned masks earlier it seems to me, and I don't want to get off too much on a tangent, so I'll try to be
brief.
But listening to this, it seems to me that the best answer that the US has been able to
come up with for a very long time was embodied in the just saying, oh, campaign, right?
Exactly.
It's just saying, oh, just don't do drugs.
And that, and it's like so pat, just don't do drugs. We don't
have to do any of this other stuff. Just don't do drugs. Just don't do drugs, except which
is obviously there are huge problems with it, but if you want to see, well it failed, right?
But if you want to see those exact problems personified, look at the lockdown, look at the
coronavirus situation for the past year, right?
We had an abstinence policy that would have war like the idea being if everyone just didn't
do anything at all, then this would go away, right?
It would just be done with except work of functioning people and we're living beings and people are going to go do things
because they're human beings.
So what can we, what steps can we take to make that safer?
Because we're going to take that steps because that's what we are.
I mean, we're animals, right?
Like we can't, there's not a cut and dry.
Just don't do it.
You can reinforce that. You can dry, just don't do it.
You can reinforce that, you can teach it, you can breach it,
but like, it's not a one size fits all,
it's not gonna fix the problem.
Exactly.
We realize that with coronavirus.
Like, we realize, how do we make this safer
because we can't lock people in their homes for a year.
Like, we realize that and it's the exact same,
but that policy, like, and that's supposed to work for something that's literally
addicted, I mean, it's like chemically addictive.
I'm like going outside and doing stuff.
Like, this is chemically addictive
and your solution is just like abstinence.
It doesn't make any sense.
Well, and to carry the metaphor even further,
a lot of the argument was, yeah, but,
I mean, maybe you won't get coronavirus
if you don't do these things, but what about people's mental health?
That was a lot of, and which was valid.
I mean, I'm not disagreeing.
That was a valid concern.
A lot of people's mental health suffered because they had to, you know, not do any of the
things that they do in a daily basis.
So a lot of people suffer for that reason. In that same way,
if you're only answer to someone who uses drugs, is don't use drugs.
And then either they do or they don't know how to cope with maybe they were self-medicating and
maybe they need some other sort of assistance. You're not addressing any of the other things.
Right. That that like I have dictated to you, this is best for you. now either do it or if you don't it's not my problem
The income disparity and economic situations that make it so that it doesn't seem like there is anything worthwhile
Outside of drugs that this is the best thing you have going and this this this approach the other thing about all this is is not
It doesn't just sound better like from a human perspective what they found from doing things this way is that people came in and sought care for all kinds of things that they had not
sought care for for a long time. The medical community learned a lot more by
engaging with people who use injection drugs as opposed to just telling them to
stop and alienating them. We learned more about how to better care for people.
They learned more, the people who actually use drugs, learned more about how to do it
in a way that reduces harm to themselves.
So everybody learned about, you know, from interacting, it was a good thing.
No HIV outbreak occurred, which is, I mean, a substantial plus.
And some people may be chose to start methadone.
Some people maybe did abstain from drugs.
That was, again, not the primary goal.
But a lot of people got better medical care,
avoided an acute risk to their life at that moment.
So, you know, maybe save their life.
And then also, we're able to prevent
negative health consequences from happening.
This also led to, especially a lot of police buy-in because the law enforcement in the area
saw that it worked, that it was good and supported it.
And they said that we don't want to go back to the way things were.
We don't want to go back to arresting people because we found them with some heroin,
because it didn't do anything.
Nobody was, the person wasn't benefited,
society didn't benefit, I didn't benefit
as the police officer had to do it.
Nobody benefited from any of this.
And this, that they are doing, this mercy model,
is actually beneficial.
We see, and so because of all that buy-in,
it was really interesting, I guess,
the FATURE administration was very pro this,
like very much promoted it.
I don't know enough about British politics.
I've discovered because the Fatcher was,
like, I guess a proponent of this
and the local labor party was very much against it.
So I don't think I really understand.
British politics in the 80s.
Sorry.
The Netherlands also contributed to this. Even in the 70s, they had people forming what they called junkie bondin
which translates to junkie unions. So people who use injection drugs,
forming these sort of groups to advocate for themselves, to share knowledge, to
basically demand that
you know, we don't want these negative health consequences to come to us,
and there are ways that we could do this if you allow us to that will keep us safer.
And by like demand, they even stormed a methadone clinic in the early 80s.
But by demanding these things for themselves and then finally working with people who would listen to them,
they did the same thing, like needle services,
methadone, police and public buy-in,
all of that stuff was happening.
While meanwhile in the US,
it was the 60s until you could even use methadone treatment.
I mean, it really, and even then, it was not widespread.
In 1988, law was passed that federal funds could not be used
for any sort of syringe service program.
That actually lasted till 2009.
So like the federal government not only isn't promoting this stuff, specifically you can't
use federal money to do this stuff, even as the UK and the Netherlands and other countries
all over the world were expanding these services, providing more of them because they saw it work, because the evidence kept mounting that it worked.
In the US, it was up to, and this is the true, a lot of this runs kind of concurrent with
HIV activists.
There was overlap, certainly, in these communities, of people who were saying in the 80s, this
infection is spreading,
and there are things we could be doing
and that are happening throughout the world
to limit the spread among people who use injection drugs,
and we're not doing any of it.
And so, like activists are the one
who started any sort of movement in this area in the US.
In San Francisco, you have the acronym,
the Dope Project that started in the early 90sope Project, that started in the early 90s.
All of this started in the early 90s.
This is wild.
This is within our lifetime.
Yeah.
That all of this finally started happening.
It started happening in the early 90s where they would do HIV testing and try to provide
needles to people who use injection drugs, try to meet people where they are, try to go find,
people who use drugs, find sex workers to encourage people
to get tested and to get clean needles and all that kind of stuff.
In Chicago, the Chicago Recovery Alliance did the same sort of work,
but they also included in that.
At the time, the only place you could get in a lock zone,
Narcan, which reverses an overdose. We use that to save someone's life acutely in an overdose
situation to opiates. At that point, you could only get it in a hospital. There was no
option to like carry it with you and save someone's life out on the street. So they
partnered with people in the healthcare community who had access to it and got it.
Which is a lot of this work has to be done outside the bounds of what is currently legal
because the law is lagging behind.
Well, I would say lots of things, the science, the human rights, the autonomy of an individual.
So they did what they had to do and they passed out in the lock zone and developed like a buyer's club
so you could ship supplies all over the US
to other programs, help develop programs in places
like New Orleans.
All of these things were happening by activists,
by people, largely people in the community
who were using injection drugs,
who were advocating for themselves
and fighting for themselves to prevent themselves
from getting HIV and other bloodborne pathogens, but at the time HIV was the biggest concern.
And all the other things that can happen if you're using a needle that has not properly been
cleaned or using a technique.
Some healthcare professionals eventually started listening, academics started listening
and like the science follows this.
As these programs were developed by people in the community who knew what was necessary,
you start to see the studies that show that it works, that time and again, this is how
we reduce the spread of HIV.
This is how we reduce the spread of hepatitis.
This is how we prevent overdose.
This is how we prevent other sorts of,
I mean, we're not even getting into infections. If you if you use a needle that hasn't properly
properly been cleaned or you don't prep the site properly, where you're going to inject
or the stuff you're going to inject, all of these things can lead to bacterial infections in the
bloodstream and horribly negative health outcomes. All of that can be to a great extent prevented
if you know how to do it safely.
And that knowledge started to spread as well,
especially like if you look to Canada,
they started the first, I mean, before we don't have them
here in West Virginia, but in Canada,
they started these safe injection sites
where you could actually go and inject drugs
with people there to give you knowledge
if you needed to know how to do it safely
and to make sure that an overdose didn't occur
and that kind of thing.
And again, the US has just still been in disarray.
I mean, some things are better, you know, things like Naloxone,
but overall, even as all these other countries have these huge coordinated
top-down sorts of efforts, I say top-down, they started from the bottom up.
They all started grassroots, but now the government is involved.
In the U.S., it really depends on where you live.
And the same thing happens over and over again.
So you have a community like ours that has a,
I would say, syringe service program.
I wouldn't say syringe exchange or needle service program.
I wouldn't say needle exchange because what we have found again and again
is that at these programs, so to get into them,
one of the things you can do is bring needles back that have been used and get needles that are unused, right?
Simple enough.
What we found is that if we put this restriction on that it's a one-to-one, you bring us one needle will give you one needle.
If it's that kind of literal exchange, which is where the word exchange comes into play, they're not as effective.
It's just not. It does nothing to decrease needle litter, which is usually the big problem, like on a community level,
people are really concerned about dirty needles in the streets.
It does nothing to reduce that.
And it increases the likelihood that people will still be sharing needles.
So... That's what you do.
You just give them needles.
Oh, okay. And there's more than that though.
And that's the other thing.
If you're giving people needles, wouldn't that increase the likelihood of letter?
It doesn't.
Well, you still, because they can still, it's still a safe place for you to dispose of
use needles.
Yeah.
And then people do.
People, because they're humans, because that's the other thing.
This isn't, the other rain has to. Because these are people who use injection drugs.
Just because I don't use injection drugs
doesn't mean I make every single decision
that would be risk-free for my life.
I drink alcohol.
That is not a risk-free decision.
Using heroin is not a risk-free decision either.
But when I use alcohol, if I drink too much
and I go to the hospital, I don't get arrested.
You know, nobody, I don't get a criminal record because I became so intoxicated that I had to go and get IV fluids or any, you know, I mean, like none of that, no.
That's a, that's weekly.
That hasn't happened.
No, my point is, I mean, you get my point.
Like, we approach it entirely differently.
And the roots of that are, I mean, they're racist and they're a way of...
Classes for sure.
They're classes.
They're a way of a systemically controlling human behavior that doesn't work and just criminalizes
people who won't do the things that we've decided arbitrarily.
They have to do or what risks they can or can't take. But what they found is that in places where they have, and these are some really
important things to debunk, a place that has a harm reduction program, a syringe service
program, statistically has less needle litter than a place that doesn't, assuming they're
both, they both have, you know, people who use injection drugs in the area. So it does not increase needle litter.
In fact, it probably decreases it.
When you just give out needles in its low barrier,
you have less sharing of needles in the community, which
means you have less likelihood that people are
going to get things like HIV or hepatitis.
The other thing is people need more than just the needle.
In order to use injection drugs, you
need sterile water a lot of the time. You need some sort of cotton or filter or something like that. You need
a cooker. You need rubber ties. You need alcohol swabs. All of those things, all that equipment
that can reduce the harm to the person who's using drugs and help them use it properly.
All of those things can be available in one of these programs, which again reduces the
risk to the person who's going to use the drugs.
You can also get an aloxone, Narcan, it's huge.
We know that one of the best ways we can prevent overdose deaths is by giving an aloxone
to people who are either using injection drugs or with people who are using injection drugs
so that they can be there.
We teach them the signs of an overdose
so they can recognize it and respond immediately
with an arcane that hopefully we've provided them with
or to call emergency services as needed.
All of that training plus you can get HIV testing,
you can get hepatitis testing.
They do other sort of medical services.
I mean, every harm reduction program is different.
Some of them are like a building,
some of them are a van that travels around.
They're all different sorts of models.
Some of them hand out condoms and do like safe sex education.
That kind of stuff.
Some of them do target more like sex workers,
while others cater more to people
who are experiencing homelessness.
I mean, they're all a little bit different
and catered to the needs of that area.
But they also allow people to exchange information.
I'm reading a handbook right now on how to properly use injection drugs, not necessarily in preparation for myself,
but because that's useful for me to know as a medical professional.
Here are all the things that the people who are the experts who have been using drugs,
tell me are the safe things and the things
to learn and things I can counsel people. It also helps to things like when fentanyl hit the streets,
fentanyl, which is a much stronger opiate, which has caused a lot of overdose deaths,
when fentanyl started appearing out there in the community, the people who use injection drugs knew something was off
before. They knew that that wealth of information exists in the people who are experts on it,
the people who use injection drugs. And it takes a while for the rest of us in the medical
profession to like, we're lagging behind and that causes unnecessary deaths.
So like that sort of information,
and it's also just a harm reduction program
puts people in a community together
who right now our society tends to forcibly separate.
Right?
And doing that is really important for people who do want to seek out methadone or suboxone or
abstain
This is the bridge for those people now. That's not the goal that can't be the goal
They don't work if that's the goal that it's been shown time and again
I mean you can have that there as part of it, but the goal has to be that
you deserve to make the decisions
for you in a safe way, in a healthy way, and I am going to do my best to provide that
for you. And whatever else happens next, we have that available. But the goal is, I am
going to provide you with what you need to reduce the harm to you
in this very specific situation.
It's pragmatic.
It focuses on the individual on stopping harm.
Again, there are all these other community public benefits from it.
I mean, people will tell you the dollar amounts that are saved by programs like this, and
that's all well and good.
I mean, that's true.
And again, if you're going to lobby somebody to protect a harm reduction program, I think
knowing that information is vital, but just as a human, this is how we save lives.
This is how we promote health.
This is preventive.
This is preventive medicine.
Well, here's helping the rest of the nation and can catch up. I mean, I I think the
dialogue has to change before any of the policies can. I mean, I think reinforcing the people who use
drugs or people and reminding people of that is a good first step because I feel like
until politicians can get to that point, it's harder to make these other things happen.
and politicians can get to that point, it's harder to make these other things happen.
Well, I just certainly hope there are a lot of models
for harm reduction throughout our lives,
and there are a lot of great models
for harm reduction in this specific arena
all over the world, and the US is behind.
Thank you so much for listening to our show,
Saul Bones, Reminder, we got a book,
it's called the Saul Bones book cleverly enough you can find
it wherever find books or soul we got a new paperback edition and came out last year there's an audio
book version of that too if that's your if that's your thing and thanks to the taxpayers for
these their song medicines is the intro and outro of our program thank you to you that that's
right you pointing at yourself for listening. We
sure appreciate it. And that is going to do for us. So until next time, my name is Justin
McElroy. I'm Sydney McElroy. And as always, don't Alright!
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