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Articles

Medicalization under prohibition: the tactics and limits of medicalization in the spaces where people use illicit drugs

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Pages 127-137 | Received 14 Mar 2019, Accepted 10 May 2020, Published online: 22 May 2020
 

Abstract

The ‘Satellite Sites’ are a harm reduction intervention in which people who use illicit drugs are employed by a community health centre to run satellite harm reduction programs within their homes. Satellite Sites straddle two worlds, at once sites of illicit and stigmatized activities, while also being sites of public health intervention. They offer a unique opportunity to examine the challenges of medicalizing a place that is still criminalized. Using data collected during 7 months of ethnographic observation and 20 interviews with key members of the program, we explore the tactics of medicalization that are deployed to legitimize the Satellite Sites. Medicalization provides legitimacy to Satellite Sites, and provides people who use drugs who run the Satellite Sites with some protection from the criminal justice system. Our results explore the friction between processes of medicalization and criminalization, with continued criminalization of drug possession and distribution negatively impacting the uptake and effectiveness of public health recommendations. Study findings highlight how the ability of public health authorities to develop safer environment interventions to improve the health of people who use drugs—including measures to address the current overdose crisis - may be severely limited by the continued criminalization of drug use.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank the study participants and Satellite Site Workers for the time, effort and willingness to share their thoughts and opinions with us. The late Raffi Balian was the founder of the Satellite Site program, and contributed to the development of this research project. His contribution is gratefully acknowledged, and he is profoundly missed.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

Gillian Kolla was supported during this research by a CIHR Banting and Best Doctoral Research Award and a Canadian Network on Hepatitis C (CanHepC) doctoral fellowship.

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