Health and Harm Reduction: Rethinking Conventional Drug Use and Policy | Jeffrey Hom | TEDxUSciences

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии •

  • @andrzejcelinski1
    @andrzejcelinski1 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the lifeguard example. Seatbelts, helmets, condoms and clean syringes are all harm reduction. Its just common sense. Thank you kindly. Once people get past all the hateful messaging and imagery that has been perpetuated about people who use drugs, a harm reduction aporoach becomes blatantly obvious, necessary and imperative. Thank you for your contributions to this discussion and field of work.

  • @aaronwatter
    @aaronwatter 2 года назад +10

    The biggest flaw of harm reduction (and of decriminalization generally) is that it does not account for the majority of people who use drugs, including opioids. Most of these people neither use every day, nor inject. The safe injection site does not capture this group. Harm reduction & decriminalization are positive but ultimately inadequate responses. What would really help is access to a safe drug supply, i.e. legalized regulation.

    • @uncertaintytoworldpeace3650
      @uncertaintytoworldpeace3650 2 года назад

      Right, an uneducated and greed fueled minority should be in control of what people are taking, wouldn’t want the populace thinking too hard about anything!

    • @grawakendream8980
      @grawakendream8980 Год назад +1

      this is insightful

    • @rener.3822
      @rener.3822 7 месяцев назад

      I mean technically legalized regulation would be a systems approach to harm reduction.

  • @Shellpooh7
    @Shellpooh7 3 года назад +3

    Thank you Jesus someone talking about it

  • @bboppppppppppppp
    @bboppppppppppppp 3 года назад +2

    thank you for this

  • @atorbubble
    @atorbubble Год назад

    yeah... swiming, heavy addiction to hard drugs. same thing

  • @2005rosebud
    @2005rosebud 2 года назад +1

    How about a safe supply system like in Vancouver B.C.?
    Fewer access to opiates send too many to fentanyl.
    Thanks for your work.

  • @christytanner3896
    @christytanner3896 3 года назад +3

    What about the percentage of addicts? Did it increase or decrease?

  • @kristytucker1476
    @kristytucker1476 3 года назад +3

    we have numbers on decreased deaths, but how many of those people are in recovery?

  • @deborahvictoriaedwards5188
    @deborahvictoriaedwards5188 3 года назад

    When the addicted are cash poor, harm reduction...

  • @catowarmeowson9964
    @catowarmeowson9964 Год назад

    *injects deadly chemicals* *dies* *stocked pokemon face*

  • @michaelhmiles
    @michaelhmiles 4 года назад +8

    Disappointing Ted talk. I Agree with harm reduction but a lot of misinformation here. Quoting flawed CDC overdose stats? 65,000 is for ALL drugs, polypharmacy, mixing with alcohol etc. not just opioids.
    Conflates dependence with addiction. Come on this is
    basic stuff. Shameful.

    • @alidelatierra
      @alidelatierra 4 года назад +7

      I dont think you understand harm reduction in a real life way, only on paper. This comment doesn't make sense if you know people who are addicts

    • @michaelhmiles
      @michaelhmiles 3 года назад +3

      @@alidelatierra What did I say that was incorrect? Your comment doesn't make any sense.

    • @Autumnpearly
      @Autumnpearly 2 года назад

      The cdc is paid to push the narrative that the government wants out there. Nothing they say is accurate and actually proven. The goal is an abstinence the goal is to save peoples lives. You should look at the statistics of other countries that have decriminalized ALL drugs and have safe supply. All the numbers that you’re talking about go down. Abstinence-based recovery doesn’t work. True harm reduction does

    • @grawakendream8980
      @grawakendream8980 Год назад

      what are you trying to say

    • @antoniochavez8907
      @antoniochavez8907 11 месяцев назад

      Education is definitely part of harm reduction philosophy. Ie: never mix benzos and alcohol