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  1. To inform the development of updated World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines on simplified service delivery for HCV infection, a global survey was undertaken among people affected or infected by HCV. The ob...

    Authors: M. Di Ciaccio, V. Villes, C. Perfect, J. L. El Kaim, M. Donatelli, C. James, P. Easterbrook and R. M. Delabre
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:15
  2. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has disproportionately affected structurally vulnerable populations including people who use drugs (PWUD). Increased overdose risk behaviors among PWUD during the pandemic have be...

    Authors: Lisa Frueh, Alexandra B. Collins, Roxxanne Newman, Nancy P. Barnett, Josiah D. Rich, Melissa A. Clark, Brandon D. L. Marshall and Alexandria Macmadu
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:14
  3. Fragmented state laws have impacted cannabis uptake and perceptions in the USA. Little research has explored the attitudes, beliefs, and social network influences of young Black men who have sex with men (BMSM...

    Authors: Rey Flores, Jared Kerman, John Schneider and Nina Harawa
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:13
  4. Syringe service programs (SSPs) deliver critical harm reduction services to people who inject drugs (PWID). Some SSPs in New York State received enhanced funding to provide additional services to combat opioid...

    Authors: Mercy Ude, Czarina N. Behrends, Shea Kelly, Bruce R. Schackman, Allan Clear, Rebecca Goldberg, Kitty Gelberg and Shashi N. Kapadia
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:12
  5. The criminalization of sex work and drug use creates unequal power dynamics easily exploited by police. Women who exchange sex (WES) in settings around the globe have reported coerced sex and sexual assault by...

    Authors: Danielle Friedman Nestadt, Kristin E. Schneider, Catherine Tomko and Susan G. Sherman
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:11
  6. Gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (GBMSM) are overrepresented in cohorts of people who inject drugs. GBMSM’s substance use is usually explored in the context of its contribution to sexual risk....

    Authors: Sophia E. Schroeder, A. L. Wilkinson, D. O’Keefe, A. Bourne, J. S. Doyle, M. Hellard, P. Dietze and A. Pedrana
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:9
  7. Drug use is a critical behavioral disorder or a delinquency behavior (in the judiciary system's words) that comes with a burden at multiple levels: individual, community, public, and global. These social struc...

    Authors: S. Ali Shafiee, AbouAli Vedadhir and Emran Razaghi
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:8
  8. Stigma and other barriers limit harm reduction practice integration by clinicians within acute psychiatric settings. The objective of our study was to explore mental health clinician attitudes towards substanc...

    Authors: Angela Russolillo, Meijiao Guan, Elizabeth J. Dogherty, Maja Kolar, Jennifer Du, Elísabet Brynjarsdóttir and Michelle Carter
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:7
  9. Black individuals in the USA face disproportionate increases in rates of fatal opioid overdose despite federal efforts to mitigate the opioid crisis. The aim of this study was to examine what drives increases ...

    Authors: Devin E. Banks, Alex Duello, Maria E. Paschke, Sheila R. Grigsby and Rachel P. Winograd
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:5
  10. Adherence to daily oral antiretroviral therapy (ART) and regular clinic appointments can be challenging for individuals who experience adverse social determinants of health. Long-acting injectable ART administ...

    Authors: Laura Fletcher, Shana A. B. Burrowes, Ghulam Karim Khan, Lora Sabin, Samantha Johnson, Simeon D. Kimmel, Glorimar Ruiz-Mercado, Cassandra Pierre and Mari-Lynn Drainoni
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:4
  11. Drug alerts designed for health and community workforces have potential to avert acute harms associated with unpredictable illicit drug markets, by preparing workers to respond to unusual drug-related events, ...

    Authors: Isabelle Volpe, Rita Brien, Jasmin Grigg, Stephanie Tzanetis, Sione Crawford, Tom Lyons, Nicole Lee, Ginny McKinnon, Caitlin Hughes, Alan Eade and Monica J. Barratt
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:3

    The Correction to this article has been published in Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:55

  12. Heroin-assisted treatment (HAT) is effective for individuals with severe opioid use disorder (OUD) who do not respond sufficiently to other opioid agonist treatments. It is mostly offered with injectable diace...

    Authors: Marc Vogel, Maximilian Meyer, Jean N. Westenberg, Adrian Kormann, Olivier Simon, Roba Salim Hassan Fadlelseed, Markus Kurmann, Rebecca Bröer, Nathalie Devaud, Ulrike Sanwald, Sophie Baumgartner, Hannes Binder, Johannes Strasser, R. Michael Krausz, Thilo Beck, Kenneth M. Dürsteler…
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:2
  13. Harm Reduction (HR) policies for People Who Use Drugs (PWUD) have a significant positive impact on their health. Such approaches limit the spread of infections and reduce opioid overdose mortality. These polic...

    Authors: Magally Torres-Leguizamon, Jamie Favaro, Dan Coello, Emmanuel G. Reynaud, Thomas Néfau and Catherine Duplessy
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2023 20:1
  14. Australian needle and syringe distribution occurs via a mix of modalities, including syringe dispensing machines (SDMs). SDMs are electronic vending machines providing (often) 24-h access to needles/syringes a...

    Authors: Phoebe Kerr, Reece D. Cossar, Michael Livingston, David Jacka, Paul Dietze and Daniel O’Keefe
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:144
  15. Illicit drug overdoses have reached unprecedented levels, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Responses are needed that address the increasingly potent and unpredictable drug supply with better reach to a wi...

    Authors: Bruce Wallace, Thea van Roode, Piotr Burek, Dennis Hore and Bernadette Pauly
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:143
  16. Fentanyl adulteration of illicit drugs is a major driver of opioid-involved overdose in the USA. Fentanyl test strips are increasingly used by people who use drugs to check for fentanyl. However, little is kno...

    Authors: Alyssa Shell Tilhou, Jen Birstler, Amelia Baltes, Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar, Julia Malicki, Guanhua Chen and Randall Brown
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:142
  17. The opioid epidemic has had a devastating impact on youth from American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) Tribes and Villages, which also experience disparate suicide rates. The use of publicly available social...

    Authors: Alec J. Calac, Tiana McMann, Mingxiang Cai, Jiawei Li, Raphael Cuomo and Tim K. Mackey
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:141
  18. The measures implemented to contain the spread of the COVID-19 virus disrupted the provision of substance misuse treatment and support. However, little is known about the impact of this disruption on individua...

    Authors: Katy Holloway, Shannon Murray, Marian Buhociu, Alisha Arthur, Rondine Molinaro, Sian Chicken, Elwyn Thomas, Sam Courtney, Alan Spencer, Rachel Wood, Ryan Rees, Stephen Walder and Jessica Stait
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:140
  19. Female sex workers (FSW) have been disproportionately impacted by the Covid-19 crisis. Data show increases of police violence toward key populations (KP), likely a consequence of their role in enforcing health...

    Authors: I. Aristegui, J. Castro Avila, V. Villes, R. M. Delabre, G. Orellano, M. Aguilera, M. Romero, L. Riegel, L. Kretzer, N. Cardozo, P. D. Radusky and D. Rojas Castro
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:139
  20. A growing body of research has focused on contextual factors that shape health and well-being of people who use drugs (PWUD). However, most of this research focuses on large cities and less is known about the ...

    Authors: Geoff Bardwell, Manal Mansoor, Ashley Van Zwietering, Ellery Cleveland, Dan Snell and Thomas Kerr
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:136
  21. Avoiding use of opioids while alone reduces overdose fatality risk; however, drug use-related stigma may be a barrier to consistently using opioids in the presence of others.

    Authors: Rachel E. Gicquelais, Becky L. Genberg, Jessica L. Maksut, Amy S. B. Bohnert and Anne C. Fernandez
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:135
  22. In New Zealand, Pacific people continue to be more at risk of gambling harm than the general population, despite increasing public health efforts and treatment service provisions introduced to address this soc...

    Authors: Edmond S. Fehoko, Maria E. Bellringer and Peggy Fairbairn-Dunlop
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:134
  23. A recent surge in HIV outbreaks, driven by the opioid and stimulant use crises, has destabilized our progress toward targets set forth by Ending the HIV Epidemic: A Plan for America for the high-priority communit...

    Authors: Tyler S. Bartholomew, Barbara Andraka-Cristou, Rachel K. Totaram, Shana Harris, Susanne Doblecki-Lewis, Lily Ostrer, David P. Serota, David W. Forrest, Teresa A. Chueng, Edward Suarez and Hansel E. Tookes
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:133
  24. People who inject drugs (PWID) are at risk for HIV and opioid overdose. We piloted PARTNER UP, a telemedicine-based program to provide PWID with access to both oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prev...

    Authors: Amy Corneli, Brian Perry, Andrea Des Marais, Yujung Choi, Hillary Chen, Rebecca Lilly, Denae Ayers, Jesse Bennett, Lauren Kestner, Christina S. Meade, Nidhi Sachdeva and Mehri S. McKellar
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:132
  25. Overdose-associated deaths and morbidity related to substance use is a global public health emergency with devastating social and economic costs. Complications of substance use are most pronounced among people...

    Authors: Jocelyn Chase, Melissa Nicholson, Elizabeth Dogherty, Emma Garrod, Jocelyn Hill, Rupinder Brar, Victoria Weaver and William J. Connors
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:130
  26. While natural disasters like hurricanes are increasingly common, their long-term effects on people who inject drugs are not well understood. Although brief in duration, natural disasters can radically transfor...

    Authors: Roberto Abadie, Manuel Cano, Patrick Habecker and Camila Gelpí-Acosta
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:129

    The Correction to this article has been published in Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:137

  27. Chronic health conditions associated with long-term drug use may pose additional risks to people who use drugs (PWUD) when coupled with COVID-19 infection. Despite this, PWUD, especially those living in rural ...

    Authors: Alex Rains, Mary York, Rebecca Bolinski, Jerel Ezell, Lawrence J. Ouellet, Wiley D. Jenkins and Mai T. Pho
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:128
  28. The overdose crisis in Canada has worsened since the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic. Although this trend is thought to be driven in part by closures or reduced capacity of supervised consumption services (...

    Authors: Rachel Cassie, Kanna Hayashi, Kora DeBeck, M.-J. Milloy, Zishan Cui, Carol Strike, Jeff West and Mary Clare Kennedy
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:126
  29. Settings throughout Canada and the USA continue to experience crises of overdose death due to the toxic unregulated drug supply. Injecting drugs alone limits the potential for intervention and has accounted fo...

    Authors: Alexa Norton, Kanna Hayashi, Cheyenne Johnson, JinCheol Choi, M-J Milloy and Thomas Kerr
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:125
  30. Hospital-based harm reduction services are needed to reduce drug-related harms, facilitate retention in care, and increase medical treatment adherence for people who use drugs. Philanthropic donor support play...

    Authors: Katherine Rudzinski, Soo Chan Carusone, Andre Ceranto, Francisco Ibáñez-Carrasco, Lisa McDonald, Dean Valentine, Adrian Guta, Elaine Hyshka, William O’Leary, Andra Cardow and Carol Strike
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:124
  31. To counteract the spread of new psychoactive substances (NPS) and to prevent the emergence of novel substances, specifically designed as a response to the legal control of individual substances, a new law was ...

    Authors: Regina Kühnl, Darya Aydin, Sabine Horn, Sally Olderbak, Uwe Verthein and Ludwig Kraus
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:122
  32. The incidence of HIV among persons who inject drugs (PWID) in the USA has been increasing since 2014, signaling the need to identify effective ways to engage PWID in HIV prevention services, namely pre-exposur...

    Authors: Michael P. Barry, Elizabeth J. Austin, Elenore P. Bhatraju, Sara N. Glick, Joanne D. Stekler, Elyse L. Tung, Ryan N. Hansen, Emily C. Williams, Alexander J. Gojic, Eleanor I. Pickering and Judith I. Tsui
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:121
  33. Preventing HIV transmission among people who inject drugs (PWID) is a key element of the US Ending the HIV Epidemic strategy and includes both pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and medications for opioid use dis...

    Authors: William H. Eger, Frederick L. Altice, Jessica Lee, David Vlahov, Antoine Khati, Sydney Osborne, Jeffrey A. Wickersham, Terry Bohonnon, Lindsay Powell and Roman Shrestha
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:120
  34. Opioid agonist therapy (OAT) is associated with reduced injection, reduced HCV transmission, and more opportunities to initiate hepatitis C virus (HCV) treatment in people who use drugs (PWUD). We aimed to stu...

    Authors: Benjamin Rolland, Caroline Lions, Vincent Di Beo, Patrizia Carrieri, Nicolas Authier, Tangui Barré, Jessica Delorme, Philippe Mathurin, François Bailly, Camelia Protopopescu and Fabienne Marcellin
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:119
  35. Harm reduction services and professionals have had to reorganise and adapt to COVID-19 prevention measures while still ensuring health and social services for people who use drugs (PUD).

    Authors: Mar Bosch-Arís, Laia Gasulla, Teresa de Gispert, Lidia Segura and Joan Colom
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:118
  36. Opioid overdose epidemic is hitting record highs worldwide, accounting for 76% of mortality related to substance use. Take-home naloxone (THN) strategies are being implemented in many developed countries that ...

    Authors: Hawraa Sameer Sajwani and Anna V Williams
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:117
  37. Narrow or non-existent Good Samaritan Law protections and harsh drug selling statutes in the USA have been shown to deter bystanders from seeking medical assistance for overdoses. Additionally, little is known...

    Authors: Alexandria Macmadu, Annajane Yolken, Lisa Frueh, Jai’el R. Toussaint, Roxxanne Newman, Brendan P. Jacka, Alexandra B. Collins and Brandon D. L. Marshall
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:116
  38. Transactional sex is an important driver of HIV risk among people who use drugs in the USA, but there is a dearth of research characterizing men’s selling and trading of sex in the context of opioid use. To id...

    Authors: Joseph G. Rosen, Kristin E. Schneider, Sean T. Allen, Miles Morris, Glenna J. Urquhart, Saba Rouhani and Susan G. Sherman
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:115
  39. Given the ongoing opioid crisis, novel interventions to treat severe opioid use disorder (OUD) are urgently needed. Injectable opioid agonist therapy (iOAT) with diacetylmorphine or hydromorphone is effective ...

    Authors: Nikki Bozinoff, Vitor Soares Tardelli, Dafna Sara Rubin-Kahana and Bernard Le Foll
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:113

    The Correction to this article has been published in Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:123

  40. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s (SAMHSA) Harm Reduction grant program expanded access to several harm reduction strategies to mitigate opioid overdose fatalities, including expa...

    Authors: Matthew R. Filteau, Brandn Green, Frances Kim and Ki-Ai McBride
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2022 19:111