Harm reduction: When does it improve health, and when does it backfire?

Health Economics seminar
Woman smoking in a car
Speaker
Davide Dragone
Date
Friday 3 Nov 2023, 15:30 - 15:30
Type
Seminar
Room
3.09
Space
Polak Building
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Woman smoking in a car

A subset of harm reduction strategies encourages individuals to switch from a harmful addictive good to a less harmful addictive good; examples include e-cigarettes (substitutes for combustible cigarettes) and methadone and buprenorphine (substitutes for opioids).

Such harm reduction methods have proven to be controversial. Advocates argue that people struggling with addiction benefit because they can switch to a less harmful substance, but opponents argue that this could encourage abstainers to begin using the harm reduction method or even the original addictive good.

Harm reduction method

This paper builds on theories of addiction to model the introduction of a harm reduction method, and it demonstrates the conditions under which each side is correct. The three key factors determining whether the introduction of a harm reduction method reduces or worsens health harms are:

  1. The enjoyableness of the harm reduction method
  2. The addictiveness of the harm reduction method
  3. The substitutability of the harm reduction method with the original addictive good.

Knowledge of these conditions can help inform regulation of harm reduction methods.

Online attendance

Interested individuals should contact healtheconomics@ese.eur.nl if they would like to attend the seminar online.

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