Sarah Gabriella Hernandez, Elissa West-Frazier, Dina Khalil, Emma McAuley, Madeleine Saldon, Livia Verklan-McInnes, Shirley Tankersley
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In the city of Chicago, opioid overdose is one of the top five drivers of the life expectancy gap between Black and non-Black Chicagoans, which reached 11.4 years in 2022. The city has responded by supporting social and behavioral health community-based organizations (i.e., delegate agencies) in implementing place-based and community-centered evidence-informed harm reduction strategies for local populations most impacted by opioid overdoses. This study highlights key findings from qualitative interviews with agency staff related to how agencies are implementing a variety of harm reduction strategies emergent practice-based innovations. Findings demonstrated how agencies creatively contended with systems-level challenges through emergent harm reduction innovations that emphasized community-based education, outreach, and choice; a person-centered approach; and a hyperlocal, place-based coordination of overdose response. Findings from this study contribute to the growing harm reduction evidence base while offering practical recommendations and examples of uptake to address challenges that impact the effectiveness of harm reduction strategies.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Communityis on the cutting edge of social action and change, not only covering current thought and developments, but also defining future directions in the field. Under the editorship of Joseph R. Ferrari since 1995, Prevention in Human Services was retitled as the Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Communityto reflect its focus of providing professionals with information on the leading, effective programs for community intervention and prevention of problems. Because of its intensive coverage of selected topics and the sheer length of each issue, the Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community is the first-and in many cases, primary-source of information for mental health and human services development.