Essential Policies and Procedures for All Harm Reduction Sites and Services
Hacks for Service and Supply Management
Many of the harm reduction leaders that were interviewed for Space Hacks talked about how critical it is to effectively manage services, supplies, and inventory in order to maintain community tranquility. It may not feel intuitive, but OGs report that ineffective management of supplies is the number one potential flashpoint for escalated situations during harm reduction services. Some general tips for all service and supply management are to:
- ALWAYS be scrupulously fair with your distribution of supplies. There is nothing more likely to cause conflict than your participants feeling like they’ve been treated unfairly.
- Be consistent in how supplies are distributed and managed across team members and locations.
- If applicable, have folks form lines and find ways to ensure that it is respected.
- Ensure cross-team communication and that everyone is committed to the same policies and expectations.
- NEVER make exceptions to boundaries without transparent, explicable parameters.
- Be a steady regular presence in the community—show up, and if you can’t, communicate why.
- Be transparent about your services and supplies—what is available and what isn’t.
- Explain yourselves—let participants know why you provide certain supplies, services or services a certain way. People are always more likely to follow rules or expectations if they understand why it is important.
Featured Hacks
These featured hacks highlight creative, practical solutions from harm reduction leaders on the ground. From DIY tools to clever workarounds, each one reflects the ingenuity, care, and real-world experience that keeps this movement alive.
Hacks for Service and Supply Management
Featured in: Featured, Hacks for Preventing Escalation
Many of the harm reduction leaders that were interviewed for Space Hacks talked about how critical it is to effectively manage services, supplies, and inventory in order to maintain community tranquility. It may not feel intuitive, but OGs report that ineffective management of supplies is the number one potential flashpoint for escalated situations during harm reduction services.
Edie Springer’s Worker Stances for Clients Who Use Drugs & Harm Reduction Worker: Best Practices
Featured in: Featured, Hacks for Preventing Escalation
Harm reduction immediately resonated for Edie, who was herself a former drug user and methadone patient. Faced with the devastation of HIV’s impact on drug-using communities, Edie fully embraced harm reduction and trained hundreds of harm reduction workers who have carried her legacy with them. She developed these worker stances in 1996 and they have been shared among many of us in the harm reduction community for generations.