Drink and Drugs News DDN Dec 2017 | Page 7

More on harm reduction at www.drinkanddrugsnews.com ‘We need to be present, consistently – not just from nine to five in an office, but at 6am in the car parks and at 10pm out with the working girls... These are people’s lives!’ provide, like access to a nutritionist, wound care specialist or dentist. But what the service really craves is ‘to reduce pressure on staff, invest in quality training and nurture specialisms’. ‘One of the heartbreaking things to watch over the last few years is how so many of my colleagues with a love and speciality for harm reduction have moved into other areas of the care sector, or even out of it entirely. Why? Because it’s not worth the heartache,’ she says. ‘You either have to leave because it’s too much, or suck up your pride and principles and get on with the work at hand.’ ‘Most importantly,’ she says, ‘we need to really take a step back and reduce the threshold for those accessing support – it can’t be that we turn away the chaotic, dependent injecting drug user because they are ten minutes late for their appointment. We need to be present, consistently – not just from nine to five in an office, but at 6am in the car parks and at 10pm out with the working girls.’ my thinks that introducing key performance indicators (KPIs) for harm reduction might be the way to regain energy and focus, and redress the attitude that ‘no one really cares about what we do or don’t do on the front end’. Having ‘60 clients on your caseload and a mountain of admin on your desk’ translates to telling the client ‘take your script and I will see you in two weeks’, instead of giving them the time and energy required for a meaningful working relationship. ‘We underestimate the power that just sitting down and having a cuppa and a chat, with no expectations, can have. We need time and we need patience, and unfortunately there is no pot of funding for that,’ she says, adding: ‘I regularly sit in team meetings in which discharge stats are sniffed out like dogs with a bone. These are people’s lives!’ Mark is also weary of the attitude that ‘NSP cover is something that can be delivered by anyone, often admin staff’. He believes that the initiative must be taken by treatment providers, in the same way that naloxone distribution has (eventually) been embraced. Just three years ago he remembers that a senior man ager in one of the larger organisations was instructing members of staff that they ‘must not talk about naloxone as we are not a campaigning organisation’. Many organisations are still silent about issues such as drug consumption rooms (DCRs) and heroin-assisted therapy, perhaps taking their lead from the government’s drug strategy, which (while acknowledging that we should protect society’s most vulnerable) only fleetingly mentions harm reduction and ignores the importance of outreach. ‘The providers of treatment really need to start to use the language of harm reduction and be clear about a commitment to those approaches, rather than continuing with a culture of harm reduction by stealth,’ says Mark. ‘If they don’t believe that they should do everything possible to campaign for initiatives and interventions that can reduce the numbers of deaths among their service users, then we are in an impossible situation.’ DDN A using lower-threshold pharmacy services, this is seen as a further reason to keep downgrading this essential service. Amy’s colleagues in another service from the same provider have told her about the ‘no bin, no pin’ policy there t o encourage returns, getting rid of pre- injection swabs ‘for good old soap and water – great! Unless of course you don’t have access to such facilities!’, and ceasing the distribution of water ampoules because of unfathomable ‘concerns around legalities’. According to Amy, a little investment in her needle exchange would go a long way. There are the material items that could be bought with more money – the BBV testing kits and homeless packs; and the specific services they could www.drinkanddrugsnews.com Want to comment? Email [email protected] or add your response on the DDN website at www.drinkanddrugsnews.com This article has been produced with support from Camurus, which has not influenced the content in any way. December/January 2018 | drinkanddrugsnews | 7