PRINCIPLES OF HARM REDUCTION
Harm reduction is a set of  practical strategies and ideas  aimed at reducing negative  consequences associated with  drug use.  
Harm Reduction is also a movement for social justice  built on a belief in, and respect  for, the rights of people who  use drugs. 
FOUNDATIONAL PRINCIPLES CENTRAL TO HARM REDUCTION 
Harm reduction incorporates a spectrum of strategies that includes  safer use, managed use, abstinence, meeting people who use drugs  “where they’re at,” and addressing conditions of use along with the use  itself. Because harm reduction demands that interventions and policies  designed to serve people who use drugs reflect specific individual  and community needs, there is no universal definition of or formula for  implementing harm reduction. 
However, National Harm Reduction Coalition considers the following  principles central to harm reduction practice:
Accepts, for better or worse, 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
Understands drug use as a complex, multi-faceted phenomenon that encompasses a continuum of  behaviors from severe use to total abstinence, and  acknowledges that some ways of using drugs are  clearly safer than others 
Establishes quality of individual and community  life and well-being — not necessarily cessation  of all drug use — as the criteria for successful  interventions and policies 
Ensures that people who use drugs and those with  a history of drug use routinely have a real voice in  the creation of programs and policies designed to serve them
Calls for the non-judgmental, non-coercive  provision of services and resources to people who  use drugs and the communities in which they live  in order to assist them in reducing attendant harm 
 Affirms people who use drugs (PWUD) themselves  as the primary agents of reducing the harms
of their drug use and seeks to empower PWUD to share information and support each other in strategies which meet their actual conditions of use 
Recognizes that the realities of poverty, class, racism, social isolation, past trauma, sex-based discrimination, and other social inequalities affect both people’s vulnerability to and capacity for effectively dealing with drug-related harm
Does not attempt to minimize or ignore the real  and tragic harm and danger that can be associated with illicit drug use 
 
Revised 2020 FOR MORE RESOURCES, VISIT HARMREDUCTION.ORG/HarmReductionCoalition 
/HarmReductionCoalition @harmreduction @harmreduction 
FOUNDATIONS OF HARM REDUCTION 
HARM REDUCTION INTERVENTIONS (H)arm (R)eduction: 
A philosophical and political movement focused on shifting power and resources to people most  
vulnerable to structural violence 
(h)arm (r)eduction: The approach and fundamental beliefs in how to provide the services 
risk reduction: Tools and services to reduce potential harm
The “risk itself (e.g. related  to drug use or sex work)  that you’re discussing 
The “mindset” that  someone brings to the  situation, including  thoughts, mood, and expectations 
RISK 
- What issue is being presented? 
 
- What other possible sources of harm might  be connected to the main issue? 
 
- What drug is being used? What is the risk of  overdose? 
 
SET 
- How are they feeling? Confident? Angry?  Anxious? 
 
- Are they physically in pain or hurt? Do they  need to get well? 
 
- Can they engage with you fully? Are their  basic needs being met? 
 
SETTING 
- What is the physical environment where the  potential harm is occurring? In a home? At  work? On the street? 
 
- Who is around them? Police, bystanders, other participants? How does the person present to  these people? How will they react? 
 
 
The physical and social environments of where the person is,  and their perception of how that can promote/reduce risk
Case Study : Jessica Jessica has been using heroin on and off for the past 10 years. Jessica stopped using for a few months while she  was with her ex, but they recently broke up. She is feeling depressed and anxious and is looking to use again. She  buys a bag and heads to the syringe exchange for some new points and heads to her encampment in a rush.