School of Public Health, University of Alberta, 3-300 Edmonton Clinic Health Academy, 11405 87 Avenue NW, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 1C9, Canada.
Inner City Health and Wellness Program, B818 Women's Centre, Royal Alexandra Hospital, 10240 Kingsway Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta, T5H 3V9, Canada.
Harm Reduct J. 2017 Jul 26;14(1):50. doi: 10.1186/s12954-017-0177-7.
In Canada, funding, administration, and delivery of health services-including those targeting people who use drugs-are primarily the responsibility of the provinces and territories. Access to harm reduction services varies across jurisdictions, possibly reflecting differences in provincial and territorial policy commitments. We examined the quality of current provincial and territorial harm reduction policies in Canada, relative to how well official documents reflect internationally recognized principles and attributes of a harm reduction approach.
We employed an iterative search and screening process to generate a corpus of 54 provincial and territorial harm reduction policy documents that were current to the end of 2015. Documents were content-analyzed using a deductive coding framework comprised of 17 indicators that assessed the quality of policies relative to how well they described key population and program aspects of a harm reduction approach.
Only two jurisdictions had current provincial-level, stand-alone harm reduction policies; all other documents were focused on either substance use, addiction and/or mental health, or sexually transmitted and/or blood-borne infections. Policies rarely named specific harm reduction interventions and more frequently referred to generic harm reduction programs or services. Only one document met all 17 indicators. Very few documents acknowledged that stigma and discrimination are issues faced by people who use drugs, that not all substance use is problematic, or that people who use drugs are legitimate participants in policymaking. A minority of documents recognized that abstaining from substance use is not required to receive services. Just over a quarter addressed the risk of drug overdose, and even fewer acknowledged the need to apply harm reduction approaches to an array of drugs and modes of use.
Current provincial and territorial policies offer few robust characterizations of harm reduction or go beyond rhetorical or generic support for the approach. By endorsing harm reduction in name, but not in substance, provincial and territorial policies may communicate to diverse stakeholders a general lack of support for key aspects of the approach, potentially challenging efforts to expand harm reduction services.
在加拿大,卫生服务的筹资、管理和提供——包括针对吸毒者的服务——主要由各省和地区负责。减少伤害服务的可及性因司法管辖区而异,这可能反映了省级和地区政策承诺的差异。我们研究了加拿大当前省级和地区减少伤害政策的质量,相对于官方文件反映减少伤害方法的国际公认原则和属性的程度。
我们采用迭代搜索和筛选过程,生成了 54 份省级和地区减少伤害政策文件的语料库,这些文件截至 2015 年底都是最新的。使用一个包含 17 个指标的演绎编码框架对文件进行内容分析,这些指标评估了政策的质量,相对于政策文件描述减少伤害方法的关键人群和方案方面的程度。
只有两个司法管辖区有现行的省级、独立的减少伤害政策;其他所有文件都集中在物质使用、成瘾和/或心理健康,或性传播和/或血液传播感染方面。政策很少具体提到减少伤害干预措施,更多地提到通用的减少伤害方案或服务。只有一份文件符合所有 17 个指标。很少有文件承认污名化和歧视是吸毒者面临的问题,并非所有物质使用都是有问题的,或者吸毒者是参与决策的合法参与者。少数文件承认不需要戒除物质使用就可以获得服务。只有略多于四分之一的文件涉及药物过量的风险,更少的文件承认需要将减少伤害方法应用于各种药物和使用方式。
当前省级和地区政策对减少伤害的描述很少或根本没有,只是在口头上或笼统地支持这种方法。通过在名义上支持减少伤害,但实际上没有支持,省级和地区政策可能向不同的利益相关者传达了对该方法的关键方面缺乏支持的一般印象,这可能会对扩大减少伤害服务的努力构成挑战。