Harm Reduction: A Different Way of Seeing People
I want to share something I came across through the work of the Peer2Peer Indigenous Society, an organization I follow on Facebook, because it speaks to something many people still misunderstand about harm reduction.
One of the biggest misconceptions is that harm reduction means “accepting addiction” or making drug use easier.
That is not what it is.
Harm reduction is a public health approach rooted in a simple truth:
People cannot change if they are not alive.
For too long, society has tried to use shame, punishment, and suffering as tools for change. But addiction is not a moral failure. It is a complex health condition shaped by trauma, brain chemistry, environment, poverty, mental health, and isolation.
Shame does not heal.
Stigma does not reverse an overdose.
Abandonment does not create recovery.
Connection does.
Harm reduction starts with a radical idea:
A person’s life has value before they are ready to change — not after detox, not after treatment, not after meeting someone else’s definition of “recovery,” but right now.
This is why harm reduction services matter.
Naloxone saves lives by reversing overdoses.
Fentanyl test strips help prevent accidental poisonings.
Syringe service programs reduce HIV, hepatitis C, and infection.
Wound care treats people who are too often ignored by the system.
Medications for opioid use disorder like methadone and buprenorphine reduce overdose risk and stabilize lives.
Housing support reduces harm by giving people safety instead of survival conditions.
These are not “enabling” services. They are survival services.
And survival is what makes recovery possible.
The person who is revived today may enter treatment tomorrow.
The person who is treated with dignity today may reconnect with healthcare.
The person who is not abandoned today may choose a different future.
You cannot shame someone into healing.
You cannot punish someone into wellness.
Harm reduction does not compete with recovery — it creates the pathway to it.
Because behind every person who uses substances is someone’s child, someone’s parent, someone’s friend. A full human life that still exists, even in struggle.
The goal is not to make addiction comfortable.
The goal is to reduce death, disease, and suffering — while keeping the door to change open.
Because the opposite of harm reduction is not recovery.
It is watching people die and calling it a lesson.
Mobile Wound Care & Outreach Services (Victoria, BC)
The Peer2Peer Indigenous Society is also providing Mobile Wound Care & Outreach support in Victoria for people experiencing homelessness and barriers to healthcare.
They are currently seeking healthcare professionals with wound care experience to volunteer with their multidisciplinary outreach team.
🩺 Wednesdays | 11:00 AM – 2:00 PM
📍 900 Block of Pandora, Victoria
They welcome Registered Nurses, Licensed Practical Nurses, Nurse Practitioners, physicians, and other qualified professionals with wound care experience.
📞 250-667-5756
📧 peer2peerindigenouscoalition@gmail.com
This is low-barrier, trauma-informed care focused on dignity, access, and human connection.
Reflective Questions
- What does “deserving help” mean in society, and who decides it?
- How does stigma influence whether people seek or avoid healthcare?
- Can punishment and shame actually lead to long-term recovery? Why or why not?
- What role does connection play in healing from addiction or trauma?
- How might harm reduction change the way communities think about human value?
- What would healthcare look like if saving lives came before judgment?
- How do housing, poverty, and isolation shape substance use outcomes?
- What responsibilities do we have to people who are still actively struggling?
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