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"If everyone knew about this, how many lives could we save?"
Do drug suppliers have a role in reducing overdose risk?
Hedden-Clayton, B., Cochran, J., Carroll, J. J., Kral, A. H., Victor, G., Comartin, E., & Ray, B. (2024). "If everyone knew about this, how many lives could we save?": Do drug suppliers have a role in reducing overdose risk?Drug and alcohol dependence reports, 12, Article 100250. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dadr.2024.100250
Introduction: An unpredictable illicit drug supply is driving high levels of overdose death in North America. Prior research has demonstrated the importance of involving people who use drugs in harm reduction intervention design and implementation. The inclusion of people who supply drugs in these efforts has been scant. We explore this possibility by interviewing persons targeted by a harm reduction educational program designed specifically for people who supply drugs. Methods: In-person interviews with people who use drugs were conducted in 2022 in Indianapolis, Indiana. We conducted a thematic analysis of data from six interviews with people who were either primarily or secondarily trained through this harm reduction training for people who supply drugs, Results: Participants described a diverse array of harm reduction strategies, some gained through the targeted education program, which they regularly practiced as they consumed and/or supplied drugs to others. People who supply drugs were regularly identified as key actors capable of widely reducing risk across drug networks. Participants described being motivated by a moral imperative to protect community members, tying the previous loss of friends and loved ones to overdose to their commitments to the safety of others. Conclusion: This article contributes to the scholarship on the role of people who supply drugs in implementing harm reduction interventions and reducing overdose risk. Better enabling grassroots harm reduction organizations to provide people who supply drugs with harm reduction training and access to harm reduction resources may help to reduce drug-related harms.