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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3-page paper discusses the harm reduction theory as it pertains to drug use, and presents pro and con issues about it. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTharred.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
come to the forefront of treatment is something called harm reduction. In this paper, well discuss harm reduction and determine if this is an effective treatment for drug addiction and
substance abuse. Harm reduction involves a series of strategies to reduce, rather than eliminate the negative consequences of drug use (Addiction
Alternatives, 2001). These strategies range from safer use of drugs (with clean needles and maybe under observation) to managed use of drugs to actual abstinence (Addiction Alternatives, 2001). The theory
behind harm reduction is that the best way to stop substance abuse is slowly, by meeting drug users on their level, understanding that one must wean, rather than stop cold
turkey, but address conditions of use as well (Addiction Alternatives, 2001). Harm reduction acknowledges that drug use is simply part of the
world and society, and acknowledges that "some ways of using drugs are clearly safer than others" (Addiction Alternatives, 2001). Harm reduction also claims to be non-judgmental, but rather, accepts each
substance abuser and tries to develop strategies to improve quality of life in addition to determining the best alternative when it comes to getting the user off the habit (Addiction
Alternatives, 2001). "Harm reduction" first arose in Great Britain, under the premise that use of illicit drugs should be made legal, and
by doing so, ends up being less harmful and more manageable to the user (Europe Against Drugs, 2005). The reason behind this is that abstinence is not a reasonable goal
- so its better to reduce harm so that dangerous diseases arent spread among the drug population (Europe Against Drugs, 2005). Harm reduction, again, ranges from legalization, to decriminalization, to
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