@sheldonbailey @KassandraKitz @momsstoptheharm No one has pushed for a one pillar model. Harm reduction is part of the continuum of care that’s needed, alongside other approaches, such as abstinence. It all falls under the same umbrella ☂Please stop further creating a divide!
@KassandraKitz To say you “believe in a person’s ability to achieve recovery, health and wellness” ignores the true nature of addiction, and the complex paths people take into and out of it.
@roni_kgg Chasing the Scream or Narconomics. Not solely harm reduction based, but really good reads to help understand why supply side interventions do not work.
Meth Use Presentation & Community Consultation presented by @HIVCommLink on August 27th
#ioad2020#overdoseawareness
Eventbrite Link 👇
https://t.co/JAOoyxj0iJ
Step One: Recognize that it is a public health emergency
Step Two: Engage people DIRECTLY involved with the impact of the public health emergency to understand what is needed
Step Three: Take action to address the needs
https://t.co/NIw6wSWPYv
BC adding 17 new supervised consumption services and 12 inhalation services in response to dramatic spike in ODs during COVID-19. https://t.co/eCgeXQO90w
The inevitable result of the war on drugs. Legally regulate the supply and these people lose their power. Someone on this thread suggested a missile would ‘take them out’. No. A missile would merely make rivals happy. Rivals are endless- until it’s legal.
Save lives. Decriminalize.
As Canada continues to battle an opioid epidemic, the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police is calling on federal lawmakers to decriminalize the possession of small amounts of illegal drugs for personal consumption.
#cdnpoli
https://t.co/9LIAMlwWuy