Common Themes of Harm Reduction-Informed Care
Themes | Examples | Illustrative Quote(s) |
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Provider as both learner and informer |
| “Letting the patient feel like they're autonomous in their treatment decisions is really important. I actually will tell patients, consider me a tool for your health and I will take on the doctor role and I will tell you what my advice is and my recommendations, but I don't ever want you to feel like I'm trying to tell you what to do.” |
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| “Harm reduction means you're giving somebody all the tools, you're informing the person, the participant. You're giving them all the tools they have to make the safest decisions, but ultimately, their decisions are their decisions” | |
Pragmatic measures of success |
| “I would qualify that success is that they're engaging with us, having an honest relationship with us, and are able to come to us when there are new problems coming up for them.” |
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| “We're not expecting that people are going to be completely abstinent, that might not even be their goal and that's totally okay. But just seeing progress and being happy with that. Like, patients like coming in time to get a refill, that's great” | |
Collaborative and interdisciplinary care teams |
| “We’re constantly talking to each other. We have weekly team meetings. We’re constantly emailing each other about the various needs of our patient. We know each other, we’re a small team and I think that makes it very easy for me to pick up the phone and call.” |
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Developing a stigma-free culture |
| “We create an environment where people are free to discuss their drug use without fear of being stigmatized or judged, so that we can give people the tools to reduce their harms around the health issues that arise for people who inject drugs” “We do interview all of our clinic-facing providers, like nurses and front desk and everything. They do an interview with the team huddle. And this guy came on last week and he was like, I just really want to treat addicts and everyone’s eyes rolled. And that was the end, the guy didn’t get the job” |
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Creating a comfortable and welcoming physical space |
| “Patients have a comfortable relationship with the clinic. Some of them, they come in, and often we're not even registering them with the doctor. They're just sitting and talking to us in the nurse’s office. We're not busy, and they can come in and talk to us.” “Our staff works really hard at making sure that patients don't feel stigmatized, that they don't feel judged or looked upon as less than. I think physically the fact that patients can come in and grab a cup of coffee, which if you're injection drug users, the fact that you have the space to do that safely in, I think is really quite critical.” |
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Low-threshold care with flexible scheduling |
| “In our clinic, we have basically a policy that patients certainly need appointment times, but often they're late for their appointment times or early for their appointment times, and we'll basically see them whenever. So that just allows a lot more flexibility for them to be able to be seen.” “We do urine toxicology tests. We try to say that very much upfront, this is not punitive, this is it just to have an open conversation. We're not trying to stop your prescription. Even if you're using opioids” |
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Reaching beyond the clinic to disseminate harm reduction orientation |
| “Very few current internal medicine residency programs even teach what harm reduction is, or how to provide low threshold MAT. We are involved in a training program locally to do just that.” |
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Creating robust referral networks to enhance transitions of care |
| “We don't send people to places where they're going to be treated poorly or abused by providers, we're not going to send them because that reflects back on us. So, we're careful about our referrals naturally.” |