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Research Papers

Food as harm reduction: barriers, strategies, and opportunities at the intersection of nutrition and drug-related harm

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Pages 586-595 | Received 17 Feb 2017, Accepted 18 Jul 2017, Published online: 08 Aug 2017
 

Abstract

Research suggests that food insecurity exacerbates the harms experienced by people who use drugs (PWUD). Therefore, improving the food security status can help PWUD reduce drug-related harms. This paper identifies a knowledge gap in public health and harm reduction literatures regarding the relationship between food and harm reduction. We argue that there needs to be a more comprehensive and systematic model of food provision in harm reduction services. Our argument is based on a qualitative case study of 42 people who currently use, or have used drugs in Vancouver, Canada and of staff of 27 programs that provide harm reduction services in the city. The research demonstrates how PWUD experience the effects of drug use on their food consumption, how they access food, and how they practice self-care. It also shows how harm reduction services, while they often provide food, are unable to systematically address the dietary-related harms associated with drug use. This presents an opportunity and a challenge for these organizations and for harm reduction as a public health approach. We call for more research to be done on food as harm reduction and for stable publically funded food provision in harm reduction-oriented services.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank everyone who participated in this study, especially the individuals who agreed to be interviewed. We would also like to thank the Dr. Peter AIDS Foundation and the Food as Harm Reduction Study Community Advisory Committee for their guidance.

Notes

1. Names and other identifiers have been altered to protect the identity of interviewees.

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