Behavioral Health
Article

Focusing on equitable harm reduction will reduce drug overdose deaths, especially as rates among Black Americans is increasing

August 1, 2022
Read time:
Download Fact Sheets
Register now
Subscribe to our Newsletter
By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Download this as a PDF

Every policy space that we explore has inequities and racism built into it. This country’s approach to people who use drugs and the services and treatment available to them is no different. Even long before the so-called “war on drugs” began, Black and brown Americans who struggled with addiction were treated differently than white Americans.[1] This was felt acutely after the war on drugs began in the 1980s and the criminalization of drug use disproportionately harmed non-white Americans with harsher sentences for certain types of drugs and a widespread lack of support for communities of color dealing with drug addiction. As the Biden Administration has sought to center racial equity in its plan to address substance use disorders (SUDs), including dedicating efforts and funding to harm reduction, it’s important to explore the complexities around SUDs and the best ways to provide support and treatment.

 Every policy space that we explore has inequities and racism built into it.

Harm reduction 101

Let’s start with some basics on harm reduction. This definition from the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Service Administration (SAMHSA) outlines it very clearly:

“Harm reduction is an approach that emphasizes engaging directly with people who use drugs to prevent overdose and infectious disease transmission, improve the physical, mental, and social wellbeing of those served, and offer low-threshold options for accessing substance use disorder treatment and other health care services.”[2]

In late 2021, the Biden Administration announced a grant opportunity for states, localities and organizations to support harm reduction efforts utilizing American Rescue Plan funds. President Biden has emphasized harm reduction as a part of the White House’s Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) strategy to address the ongoing opioid crisis.[3]  

The harm reduction approach to people who use drugs is much more impactful, and ultimately successful in helping people connect with treatment compared to the traditional, criminalization approach that has been favored throughout the decades. And an important new element to this funding opportunity was that syringes could be purchased with federal funds, a needed policy change, to ensure that syringe services programs could distribute clean syringes as part of the overall package of services they were providing.

Biden’s needle exchange policy and the media blowback

Soon after this funding opportunity was announced, some media outlets pounced on the fact that these funds could also be used for “safe smoking kits.”[4] The grant guidelines themselves did not specify what could or would be included in the kits, but they can include supplies such as mouthpieces, lip balm, materials for filters and alcohol wipes, but are not limited to these items. This was part of an overall effort to expand allowable uses of these funds and ensure that the grantees had flexibility in their proposals to meet the needs of the communities they serve and the issues those communities were facing.

 The uproar over the “safe smoking kits” immediately translated into, amongst some media outlets, “the Biden Administration is distributing crack pipes.”

You can see where this is going, right? The uproar over the “safe smoking kits” immediately translated into, amongst some media outlets, “the Biden Administration is distributing crack pipes.” This is a blatantly racist dog-whistle callback to the war on drugs in the 1980s’ (and even before) that designed different penalties based on crack versus powder cocaine. Crack was tied to harsher sentences, its usage disproportionately associated with Black and brown people, while powder cocaine was more popular among affluent white people.

Black and brown people are dying by overdose at twice the rate of white people

Evidence-based harm reduction approaches shouldn’t be driven by old, bad policy and media uproar. The grantees applying for these funds are best situated to know the needs in their communities, but ultimately there were some “clarifications” issued by the Biden Administration that funds would not be used for crack pipes.  

So, we’re still here, frustratingly developing policy based on stereotypes and blowback, while at the same time we are making progress in acceptance of syringe service programs and distribution of clean needles. It’s hard not to think that this growing acceptance has something to do with white people disproportionately driving overdose and death rates earlier on in the opioid crisis.

 We need to take this opportunity to hold the Administration to its commitment to focus on racial equity.

The data is showing that Black and brown people are dying of drug overdoses at a growing rate, especially within the last few years.[5] A recent article in The New York Times stated that the rate of overdose deaths among Black people increased 44 percent from 2019 to 2020, twice the rate of white people. We need to take this opportunity to hold the Administration to its commitment to focus on racial equity and center what we know works to connect people who use drugs with support and treatment. Let’s not let racist stereotypes and outdated policies continue to drive how we approach public health, criminal justice and treatment for people and communities struggling with addiction.  

[1] https://ldi.upenn.edu/our-work/research-updates/the-war-on-drugs-as-structural-racism/  

[2] https://www.samhsa.gov/find-help/harm-reduction  

[3] https://www.naccho.org/blog/articles/white-house-centers-harm-reduction-and-equity-in-year-1-drug-policy-priorities  

[4] https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/21/us/politics/biden-harm-reduction-crack-pipes.html  

[5] https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/19/health/overdose-pandemic-race.html

Download Fact Sheets

District 10

Download

All Council Districts 2024

Download

District 4

Download

District 2

Download

District 11

Download

District 9

Download

District 8

Download

District 5

Download

District 7

Download

District 1

Download

District 3

Download

District 6

Download

West Boulevard

Download

University

Download

Union-Miles

Download

Tremont

Download

Stockyards

Download

St.Clair-Superior

Download

Old Brooklyn

Download

Ohio City

Download

North Shore Collinwood

Download

Mount Pleasant

Download

Lee-Seville

Download

Lee-Harvard

Download

Kinsman

Download

Kamm's Corners

Download

Jefferson

Download

Goodrich-Kirtland Park

Download

Glenville

Download

Fairfax

Download

Euclid-Green

Download

Edgewater

Download

Downtown

Download

Detroit Shoreway

Download

Cudell

Download

Collinwood-Nottingham

Download

Clark-Fulton

Download

Central

Download

Buckeye-Woodhill

Download

Buckeye-Shaker Square

Download

Brooklyn Centre

Download

Broadway-Slavic Village

Download

Bellaire-Puritas

Download

All Neighborhoods 2024

Download

West Boulevard Factsheet

Download

University Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Union-Miles Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Tremont Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Stockyards Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

St. Clair-Superior Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Old Brooklyn Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Ohio City Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

North Shore Collinwood Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Mount Pleasant Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Lee-Seville Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Lee-Harvard Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Kinsman Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Kamm's Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Jefferson Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Hough Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Hopkins Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Goodrich-Kirtland Park Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Glenville Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Fairfax Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Euclid-Green Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Edgewater Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Downtown Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Detroit Shoreway Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Cuyahoga Valley Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Cudell Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Collinwood-Nottingham Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Clark-Fulton Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Central Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Buckeye-Shaker Square Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Brooklyn Centre Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Broadway-Slavic Village Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

Bellaire-Puritas Neighborhood Factsheet

Download

All Neighborhoods 2016

Download

District 2

Download

District 1

Download

Ohio Women Statewide

Download

All Women Fact Sheets

Download

Wyandot Women

Download

Wood Women

Download

Williams Women

Download

Wayne Women

Download

Washington Women

Download

Warren Women

Download

Vinton Women

Download

Van Wert Women

Download

Union Women

Download

Tuscarawas Women

Download

Trumbell Women

Download

Summit Women

Download

Stark Women

Download

Shelby Women

Download

Seneca Women

Download

Scioto Women

Download

Sandusky Women

Download
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Download report

Subscribe to our newsletter

5 Things you need to know arrives on Mondays with the latest articles, events, and advocacy developments in Ohio

Explore the fact sheets

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique.

No Related Fact Sheets

Explore Topics

Browse articles, research, and testimony.

Poverty & Safety Net
Article

Cleveland’s population is steady, older adult poverty continues to grow

Emily Campbell
September 16, 2024
Poverty & Safety Net
Article

Why we changed how we’re calculating race data

Alex Dorman
September 9, 2024
Poverty & Safety Net
Article

The importance of seeing yourself in the data

Emily Muttillo
September 9, 2024
Behavioral Health
Article

988 and Suicide Prevention Awareness Day + Month

Kyle Thompson
September 6, 2024
Behavioral Health
Article

Ohio observes fourth annual Overdose Awareness Day

Dylan Armstrong
September 3, 2024
Medicaid
Article

Community Reinvestment Collaborative Plan proposals are in review

Brandy Davis
September 3, 2024