Abstract
Since the late 1980s drug policy and practice within UK has been heavily influenced by the idea of reducing drug related harm. The paradigm of harm reduction, which has shaped drug treatment services grew out of the fear that HIV may spread rapidly and widely amongst injecting drug users. This article looks at the extent to which drug use or HIV have had the greater impact on individual and public health within UK and the extent to which it has been possible to reduce drug related harm in the face of continuing drug use. The article concludes that in the face of the growth in the prevalence of problem drug use over the last 10 years and the persistence of an array of drug related harms including: the extent of Hepatitis-C amongst injecting drug users, the extent of drug related crime and the impact of drugs on communities and families that it may be appropriate now to make drug prevention, rather than harm reduction, the key aim of drug policy and practice.