What is Harm Reduction?
Harm reduction is a set of evidence-based public health strategies and policies designed to reduce negative social, health, and legal consequences associated with various human behaviors—particularly substance use—without requiring abstinence or cessation. The approach refers to a range of intentional practices and public health policies designed to lessen the negative social and/or physical consequences associated with various human behaviors, both legal and illegal. Rather than condemning or ignoring risky behaviors, harm reduction meets people where they are, providing non-judgmental support, education, and practical tools to enhance safety and well-being.
The framework accepts that licit and illicit drug use is part of our world and chooses to work to minimize its harmful effects rather than simply ignore or condemn them, understanding drug use as a complex, multi-faceted phenomenon that encompasses a continuum of behaviors from severe use to total abstinence. Core principles include respect for individual autonomy, recognition that some methods of use are safer than others, prioritization of quality of life over complete behavioral change, and acknowledgment that social inequalities—poverty, racism, trauma, discrimination—affect both vulnerability to harm and capacity to reduce it.
Origins & Lineage
The modern harm reduction movement was a response to the HIV-AIDS crisis in the 1980s and grew out of civil disobedience and grassroots advocacy among communities of people who used drugs. In 1985, the United Kingdom opened the first needle exchange. British activists packaged and sold the concept to the rest of the world, with the concepts and practices soon spreading to North America, where activists, like those from ACT UP, engaged in high-profile direct action and advocacy for the legalization of syringe exchanges—conducting underground distribution in the meantime—as HIV spread through communities of people who injected drugs.
Harm reduction arose from multiple movements in the United States in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, including the Black Panther Party survival programs, the Women’s Health Movement that emerged from feminist activism around reproductive health, and the grassroots activism during the AIDS crisis. The phrase is attributed to John Szyler, an early Chicago-based harm reductionist.
Throughout its history, harm reduction has been a political and social movement driven by and put into practice by people directly impacted by the War on Drugs and frontline healthcare workers, while also being informed by academic public health experts. The two most important forces promoting harm reduction in the USA have been activism and scientific research.
How It’s Practiced
Harm reduction manifests through numerous practical interventions. Syringe exchange, the distribution of equipment needed for injecting drugs, is one of the defining practices of harm reduction. Other established interventions include methadone and buprenorphine maintenance therapy for opioid use disorder, naloxone distribution for overdose reversal, supervised consumption sites, and fentanyl test strips.
DanceSafe, a nonprofit organization founded in 1998 by Emanuel Sferios, set up tables at music festivals, raves, and other events to distribute non-biased educational literature focused on harm reduction for safe and responsible drug use, including testing kits so that users may obtain more information about the contents of their pills. Drug checking services at festivals use reagent testing or spectrometry to identify adulterants and prevent overdoses from contaminated substances.
In therapeutic contexts, Psychedelic Harm Reduction and Integration (PHRI) is a transtheoretical and transdiagnostic clinical approach to working with patients who are using or considering using psychedelics in any context. This includes preparation support, integration of experiences, and non-judgmental counseling that respects client autonomy around psychedelic use.
Harm Reduction Today
Harm reduction has increasingly gained mainstream recognition. The federal government recognizes the need to increase harm reduction efforts across the country, especially in the fight to end the opioid epidemic. Syringe service programs now operate through county health departments, nonprofits, and community organizations. In 2021, New York City opened the first publicly recognized safe injection site.
At music festivals and conscious gatherings, harm reduction booths offer drug checking, peer education, hydration support, and safer-use information. Organizations like DanceSafe, Zendo Project (providing psychedelic peer support), and regional syringe programs bring harm reduction principles to diverse communities. Mental health providers increasingly offer psychedelic integration therapy using harm reduction frameworks, acknowledging that people will use these substances and deserve informed, compassionate support.
Online resources, training programs, and advocacy campaigns have expanded the reach of harm reduction education. However, it is still perceived to be politically contentious today.
Common Misconceptions
Harm reduction is often mischaracterized as condoning or enabling drug use. Harm reduction is not simply a so-called “common sense” approach—it’s a theory and practice developed by and for people who use drugs in the face of government policies designed to incarcerate them and withhold lifesaving resources. It neither endorses nor condemns substance use; it prioritizes survival and dignity.
Some assume harm reduction is incompatible with recovery or abstinence. In reality, harm reduction acknowledges abstinence as one point on a continuum of use and recognizes that any reduction in harm—whether that means using less, using differently, or stopping entirely—is a positive change.
Harm reduction is also not utilitarian in its philosophical foundation. The historical genesis of harm reduction programs and the crucial moral imperative that distinguishes these programs are not utilitarian; the practical implementation of harm reduction programs is not, and probably cannot be, fully utilitarian. The movement is grounded in human rights, social justice, and respect for autonomy rather than purely in cost-benefit calculation.
How to Begin
For individuals: familiarize yourself with the principles outlined by the National Harm Reduction Coalition, which provides educational resources, training opportunities, and a network of practitioners. Those using substances can access local syringe service programs, obtain naloxone and fentanyl test strips, and connect with peer support groups.
For practitioners: training in harm reduction psychotherapy, motivational interviewing, and trauma-informed care forms the foundation. The Harm Reduction Therapy Center and Portland Psychotherapy Clinic offer specialized training in psychedelic harm reduction and integration.
For community members: support local harm reduction organizations through volunteering, donations, or advocacy. DanceSafe offers volunteer training for festival-based drug checking. Organizations like the National Harm Reduction Coalition provide toolkits for starting syringe programs or harm reduction groups.
Key texts include “Drug Use for Grown-Ups” by Carl Hart and resources from Harm Reduction International. Peer educators with lived experience remain the movement’s core—harm reduction is most effective when delivered by and for the communities it serves.