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Living with addiction: The perspectives of drug using and non-using individuals about sharing space in a hospital setting
Institution:1. University of Toronto, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, Toronto, Canada;2. Casey House Hospital, Toronto, Canada;1. Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, 155 College Street, Toronto, ON M5T 3M7, Canada;2. Social and Epidemiological Research Department, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), 33 Russell Street, Toronto, ON M5S 2S1, Canada;3. School of Kinesiology and Health Science, Faculty of Health, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada;4. Faculté de médecine et des sciences de la santé, Université de Sherbrooke, Campus Longueuil 1111, rue St-Charles Ouest, Longueuil, QC J4K 5G4, Canada;5. South Riverdale Community Health Centre, 955 Queen Street East, Toronto, ON M4M 3P3, Canada;6. Centre for Research on Drugs and Health Behaviour, Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London WC1H 9SH, United Kingdom;1. Syracuse University, Department of Sociology, 302 Maxwell, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA;2. National Development and Research Institutes, Inc., Behavioral Sciences Training Program, 71 West 23rd Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10010, USA
Abstract:Hospitals seem to be places where harm reduction approaches could have great benefit but few have responded to the needs of people who use drugs. Drawing on recent theoretical contributions to harm reduction from health geography, we examine how the implementation of harm reduction is shaped by space and contested understandings of place and health. We examine how drug use and harm reduction approaches pose challenges and offer opportunities in hospital-based care using interview data from people living with HIV and who were or had recently been admitted to a hospital with an innovative harm reduction policy. Our data reveal the contested spatial arrangements (and the related practices and corporeal relations) that occur due to the discordance between harm reduction and hospital regulatory policy. Rather than de-stigmatising drug use at Casey House Hospital, the adoption of the harm reduction policy sparked inter-client conflict, reproduced dominant discourses about health and drug users, and highlights the challenges of sharing space when drug use is involved. The hospital setting produces particular ways of being for people who use and those who do not use drugs and the demarcation of space in a drug using context. Moving forward, harm reduction practice and research needs to consider more than just interactions between drug users and healthcare providers, or the role of administrative policies; it needs to position ethics at the forefront of understanding the collisions between people, drug use, place, and space. We raise questions about the relationship between subjectivity and spatial arrangements in mediating the success of harm reduction.
Keywords:Harm reduction  Hospital  Space  Subjectivity
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