Programme

Sunday April 16

12:00

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Youth Caucus

Room number: 106

Pre-conference assembly for (self-identified) young people.

14:00

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Disreputable & Criminalised Bodies: Drug User & Sex Worker Caucus

Room number: 215

Pre-conference sex worker & drug user community caucus.

16:00

Opening ceremony: Welcome to HR23

Room number: Plenary 3 & VIRTUAL

Chaired by Naomi Burke-Shyne, Executive Director, Harm Reduction International

Welcome to Country

Welcome remarks:
Lord Mayor of Melbourne, Sally Capp

Keynote address:
Helen Clark, Former Prime Minister of Aotearoa New Zealand, Chair of the Global Commission on Drug Policy

Speakers:
Sione Crawford, Chief Executive Officer, Harm Reduction Victoria
The Hon. Rachel Stephen-Smith, MLA, Minister for Health of the Australian Capital Territory
The Hon. Rose Jackson, MLC, Minister for Mental Health of New South Wales

Awards Presentations:
Presentation of the HR19 Carol and Travis Jenkins Award to Andriy Yarovoi
HR23 Gill Bradbury Award for Excellence in Service Provision
HR23 Carol and Travis Jenkins Award
HR23 National Rolleston Award
HR23 International Rolleston Award

Followed by welcome reception in Exhibition Foyer

Monday April 17

09:00

Plenary 1: CHALLENGING SYSTEMS OF OPPRESSION

Room number: Plenary 3 & VIRTUAL

Chair: Annie Madden, Harm Reduction Australia
Speakers:

  1. Gideon Lasco, University of the Philippines Diliman's Department of Anthropology, Philippines
  2. Kirsten Han, Transformative Justice Collective, Singapore
  3. Gina Jackson, Return to the Heart Foundation, USA
  4. Kassandra Frederique, Drug Policy Alliance, USA

10:30

Morning break

11:00

Major 1: Reclaiming Health: Indigenous Approaches to Harm Reduction

Chair: Gaby Bruning

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Pete Dawson: Bunjilwarra Aboriginal youth healing service (917)
  • NILAWAN PITAKPANAWONG: Mobile Methadone Therapy for Drug Users Within Ethnic Groups in Fang District, Chiangmai, Thailand (566)
  • Jackson Heraid: 24 Hour Mobile Integrated Advocacy in Remote Indigenous Territories (841)

Major 2: Towards the Elimination of Viral Hepatitis C

Chair: Annette Verster

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Lisa Maher: Incidence of primary hepatitis C infection among people who inject drugs in Australia: Progress towards elimination (687)
  • Margaret Bourke: Maintaining Hepatitis C Micro-Elimination through times of Crisis: Covid pandemic, Beneficiaries of Temporary protection and people seeking international protection (442)
  • DANIL NIKITIN: Feasibility of HCV-specific Self-testing, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment as a model for effective linkage to care of Persons who Live with Hepatitis C and Inject Drugs in Kyrgyzstan (451)
  • Tom Wright: Hepatitis C transmission trends in a prison system with high DAA Coverage: A case for stronger Harm Reduction Strategies (521)

Major 3: Harm Reduction Funding - Actions, Reflections and Recommendations

Chair: Tom Brigden

Room number: 219

  • Gaj Gurung: The missing link – increasing domestic public financing for harm reduction through social contracting (952)
  • Wambui Karanja: Taking stock: challenges and opportunities for increasing domestic investment in harm reduction in six countries (961)
  • Ganna Dovbakh: Changes in the Harm Reduction Packages and Unit Costs during Transition from International to Domestic Funding among Selected Countries of EECA Region (1022)
  • Ernesto Cortes: Inclusion and participation of people who use drugs in Global Fund processes in Latin America (265)
  • Yan Win Soe: Legal Review over Sustaining Financing and Harm Reduction Services in Myanmar (281)
  • Pulod Dzhamolov: Harm reduction does not equal funding reduction: case of Tajikistan (811)

Major 4: Women Fighting Back: Best Practices in Harm Reduction

Chair: Ruth Birgin

Room number: 220

  • Joelle Puccio: Substance Use in Pregnancy: A toolkit for all of us (WHRIN good practice series) (95)
  • Julie-Anne Mac Donnell: Women in Chains - The Tears and the Fears: Gender Based Violence amongst South African women who use drugs. (WHRIN Good practice Series) (131)
  • Aura Roig: Metzineres. Accompaniment to womxn who use drugs surviving multiple situations of violence and vulnerability (289)
  • Wangari Kimemia: “Our bodies, our rights.” A toolkit integrating sexual and reproductive health with harm reduction services for women and non-binary people who use drugs (147)
  • Ruth BIRGIN: “Somewhere safe to stay.” Expanding shelter access for women and non-binary people experiencing gender based violence. (152)
  • Thazin Than Naing: “For Women, by Women” - Women Leading Female Friendly Services is Key to a Successful Response! (538)

Side meeting 10: Harm Reduction in the MENA Region

Room number: 215

MENAHRA aims at organizing a side meeting during the HRI conference, in Australia, to disseminate findings on the following highlights: MENAHRA’s achievements in the past 3 years and the upcoming activities, Egyptian model on Hepatitis Elimination, OST introduction in Egypt, OST shortage in Lebanon and MENA section in the GSHR report 2022.

Wellbeing 1: CANCELLED: Grief discussion group for people that have lost loved ones by overdoses and consequences of the drug war

Room number: 211

  • Mélodie Talbot: Grief discussion group for people that have lost loved ones by overdoses and consequences of the drug war (374)

Workshop 1: Integrating Queer-Affirmative Counseling Practice into Harm Reduction Therapy

Room number: 217

  • Ruod Ariete: Integrating Queer-Affirmative Counseling Practice into Harm Reduction Therapy (526)

12:00

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Australian Prisons & Harm Reduction

Room number: 216

Speakers and discussion to progress the implementation of best practice in-prison harm reduction strategies in Australia, with input from HRVic, Burnet Institute, UNSW and Hepatitis Australia.

Side meeting 3: Family Drug Support

Room number: 206

Family Drug Support has been providing support to families and friends impacted by someone’s alcohol or other drug use for over 26 years. This session will include an overview of our services, our harm reduction approach, research on the benefits of supporting families (for them and the substance user), and videos from families and services around the world including; Carol Beyer (Families for Sensible Drug Policy USA), Jackie McKenna (Ireland), Pauline Stewart (Family Drug Support Aoteroa NZ) and Sarah Evans (Open Society Foundations USA).

12:30

Lunch break

12:30

Side meeting 2: The Politics of Overdose Prevention: The Struggle to Open (and Keep Open) Spaces for Safer Drug Use

Room number: 214

This roundtable will discuss the political struggles that panellists and participants have had to go through to open drug consumption rooms, supervised injecting facilities and overdose prevention sites, and keep them open. The aim is to provide a space for collective reflection and learning on how to do this. This will be of use to all those who are already engaged in these struggles, as well as people who want to set up similar services in the places where they come from. Bring your experience, anger and ambitions. Leave inspired with new ideas on how to save lives.

Side meeting 4: Harm Reduction Perspectives in the Philippines: Situation Assessment, Alternatives to Incarceration, UN Joint Programme on Human Rights

Room number: 215

This event is to take stock of the different initiatives related to harm reduction in the Philippines - in Cebu and the two adjacent cities. Added UN system, governments, and civil society will share perspectives. UNODC will share the findings of the ad hoc assessments and roll out plans, the government and civil society will share some work related to alternatives to incarceration for PWUD (pre-arrest notably) and the overall frame enabled by the Joint UN Programme on Human Rights.

Side meeting 5: Indigenous Peoples AoD Network

Room number: 106

All delegates who are Indigenous are welcome to come along and connect, share experiences, and hear a bit about the new Indigenous People’s International Policy Network. Together we are stronger.

13:00

Side meeting 6: Leveraging Law and Politics Towards Abolition of the Death Penalty for Drug Offences

Room number: 218

This high-level side-event will draw attention to the concerning surge in executions for drug offences in 2022, and discuss legal, political, and trade tools available to abolitionist governments to promote abolition - both in relation to drug offences specifically, and as part broader efforts to abolish the death penalty in all its forms.

Keynote Address:

  • H.E. Tsakhia Elbegdorj, Former President of Mongolia and Commissioner, International Commission against the Death Penalty (online intervention)

Panellists:

  • Mary Ellen Miller, Assistant Secretary - Human Rights and Social Inclusion, Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
  • Ramkarpal Singh, Deputy Minister, Prime Minister's Department (Law and Institutional Reform), Malaysia
  • Karen Gomez Dumpit, Former Commissioner, Commission on Human Rights of the Philippines
  • Kirsten Han, Journalist and Death Penalty Abolitionist
  • Naomi Burke-Shyne, Executive Director, Harm Reduction International

Chaired by: Dr Mai Sato, Inaugural Director, Eleos Justice - Monash University

Closing Remarks:

  • H.E. Helen Clark, Former Priminister of New Zealand; Chair, Global Commission on Drug Policy, Commissioner, International Commission against the Death Penalty

14:00

Concurrent 1: Chemsex Around the World

Chair: Nia Dunbar & Sjef Pelsser

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Andrés Lekanger: Preventing rape in the Norwegian chemsex-scene using chemsex-participants’ real stories in social media campaign (197)
  • Karin Di Monteiro: Sexualized drug use and chemsex in Brazil: a multiple perspective action to a multiple care issue (243)
  • Stephane Wen-Wei Ku: Experiences of harm and mental ill-health among gay, bisexual and other men-who-have-sex-with-men who use methamphetamine or GHB/GBL in different combinations: findings from a chemsex survey in Taiwan (278)
  • Dawie Nel: High on HIV; Low on Retention: MSM Chemsex drug houses in Soweto, South Africa (291)
  • Yasir Ali Khan: Chemsex intervention in extremely conservative context: The case of Pakistan (807)
  • Yannick Gaudette: Individual and community harm reduction strategies for those who practice chemsex in Quebec (73)

Concurrent 2: Covid-19: Locked Down, but Not Knocked Out

Chair: Ernst Wisse

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Marcela Jofré: How has COVID impacted the access to health and harm reduction services in prisons around the world and lessons for a human rights-oriented approach (348)
  • Lisa Boucher/Zoë Dodd, in memory of Abeera Shahid : Evaluation of Outreach Supports to People Experiencing Homelessness in Encampments during COVID-19 in Toronto, Canada (361)
  • Myo Thet Oo: Myanmar: Community-led harm reduction in sex works during the time of Coup & COVID-19 (622)
  • Carol Strike: Safer supply and COVID-19: Client and service provider’s perspectives on implementation challenges and benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario, Canada. (373)
  • Chris Gough: Isolation Blues: the role of the peer based ATOD organisation Canberra Alliance for Harm Minimisation and Advocacy (CAHMA) in supporting people who use drugs during Covid-19 lockdown and isolation. (700)
  • Philippa Jones: Pairing COVID-19 vaccination support with increased access to HCV treatment for PWID: A New Zealand Pilot (513)
  • Mohammad Omar Faruque: Community is for the community: "One Meal Per Day" Initiative by the Network of People Who Use Drugs (NPUD), Bangladesh during the COVID-19 pandemic (817)

Concurrent 3: It's Toxic! Lessons on Safer Supply from Canada

Chair: Shay J. Vanderschaeghe

Room number: 219

  • Gillian Kolla: Benefits and tensions from prescribed safer supply: A comparative analysis of programs in two Canadian provinces (359)
  • Mohammad Karamouzian: Challenges Of Implementing Safer Supply Initiatives in Canada: A Qualitative Analysis (888)
  • Katherine Rudzinski: Exploring the potential impacts of safer supply programs (SSPs) on criminalized income-generating activities: Perspectives of clients and service providers in Ontario, Canada (1007)
  • Scott Elliott: A Roadmap for Implementing Injectable Opioid Agonist Therapy: Learnings from a Three-Year Pilot Project (504)

Concurrent 4: The Pivotal Role of Communities, NGOs and Academia in Tracking, Monitoring and Evaluation

Chair: Ernesto Cortés

Room number: 220

  • Kerryn Drysdale: Can we change public attitudes around the difficult experiences of incarcerated people with histories of injecting drug use? A case study of research translation for and by community (378)
  • Chaiya boontem: Community Led Monitoring: Building Community Voices Through Community Led Data (427)
  • Svitlana Moroz: Rapid response to discrimination and violance against women who use drugs in EECA countries during COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns (445)
  • Temitope Salami: Global State of Harm Reduction 2022 (993)
  • Jason Grebely: A global systematic review of the epidemiology of people who inject drugs: Prevalence, sociodemographic characteristics, risk environments and injecting-related harm (266)

Concurrent 5: From Schools to the Street: Youth-Centred Approaches to Harm Reduction

Chair: Ruby Lawlor

  • Jade Creelman: Community is Harm Reduction (125)
  • Andre Gomes: Building a police-free future for our schools (816)
  • Nick Kent: What’s going on with school drug education? Principles, Principals and piloting “Smarter About Drugs” (127)
  • Kasparas Vasiliauskas: Start low, go slow: Envisioning the future of drug education from the young age (970)

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Australian Drug Policy & Human Rights Violations

Room number: 216

Please note: Start time is 14:15

There is a lot of talk about human rights based policy in Australia and Victoria. Why is our drug policy still so inhumane?

• Dr. Penny Hill: Civil society perspectives on Australia’s human rights obligations in relation to drug policies and harm reduction
• Fitzroy Legal Service: Harm Reduction and Community Lawyering: reflecting on the outcomes of the coronial inquest into the passing of Veronica Nelson and 21 years of flexible legal outreach to people who use drugs

Workshop 2: Using the W3 Framework to help improve and demonstrate the full value of peer-led work with people who use drugs

Room number: 217

  • Graham Brown: Using the W3 Framework to help improve and demonstrate the full value of peer-led work with people who use drugs (569)

14:30

Side meeting 7: The Harm Reduction Journal - open and informal strategic planning and discussion meeting

Room number: 214

Convener: Nick Crofts, Editor-in-Chief

Presentations/workshop on (among other issues):
• mentoring young and peer researchers as authors and reviewers,
• the changing face of harm reduction and broadening the scope of the Journal,
• challenging criminalisation,

and open feedback and discussion about the future directions of the Harm Reduction Journal.

15:30

Afternoon break

16:00

Concurrent 6: Peers, Politics and Power: Learning Lessons from the Drug User Rights Movement

Chair: Aditia Taslim Lim

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Gregory Taylor: The Time is Now: The Establishment of an Independent Peer Organisation in Tasmania (389)
  • Bee Hayes: Emerging Interest for Peer Education In Instructional Contexts and Systemic Barriers (956)
  • Wan Traga Duvan Baros: The Resurrection of Indonesia Network People Who Use Drugs through the Participation of Peers Group as the community-led responses (255)
  • Voravat Rugvong: NATIONAL NETWORK STRENGTHENING MODEL DEMONSTRATION: TRANSPARENT MANAGEMENT CAUSE UNITY, SOLIDARITY AND EMPOWER STRONG PARTNERSHIP. (1048)

Concurrent 7: Moving Beyond Criminalisation

Chair: Caitlin Hughes

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Nicole Luongo: Decrim Done Right: A community-led, rights-based path for drug policy in Canada (731)
  • Alex Kral: Impact of Drug Decriminalization on Law Enforcement in Oregon, USA (734)
  • Teddy Wandera: Unity for Purpose: A case on the decriminalization of harm reduction in Kenya (749)
  • Mary Catherine Alvarez Del Rosario: Linking communities with the justice system to advance humane drug policy in the Philippines (1031)

Concurrent 8: Coming Out with Pride: Stories of the LGBTQI+ Community and Harm Reduction

Chair: Nicky Bath

Room number: 219

  • Midnight Poonkasetwattana: Health, Equality, and Intersectionality: LGBTQI people who use drugs in Thailand (342)
  • Ahmed Said: Who can see us! Overlapping Risks of Men who have Sex with Men [MSM] and sex work among PWUD in Kwale County, Kenya. (893)
  • Adam Bourne: Self-perceived problematic drug use and harm reduction service engagement among LGBTQA+ young people in Australia (523)
  • Koharu Loulou Chayama: Young sexual and gender minority men’s perspectives on drug checking services in Metro Vancouver, Canada: a qualitative study (250)
  • Awombda Codd: Sex positive, pleasure, and play (322)

Concurrent 9: Spaced Out: The Politics of Drugs, Class and Space

Chair: Prince Bull-Luseni

Room number: 220

  • Kit Regan: Phenomenology of Harm reduction Peer work with people Using substances and experiencing homelessness in the City. (663)
  • Kiriba Kariuki: Drug User Mobilization for services in a criminalized Legal Environment of COVID-19 pandemic – Case of Kenya (792)
  • Nic Robinson: Safe Space: A Harm-Reduction Centre underpinned by Trauma Informed and Feminist frameworks (544)
  • Bec Thatcher: Solidarity Persists: a harm reduction service standing strong against the forces of gentrification (323)

Concurrent 10: Last Night Harm Reduction Saved My Life: Views from Music Festivals and Nightscenes

Chair: Ailish Brennan

Room number: 211

  • Amy Peacock: Awareness of, and behavioural responses to, drug alerts among people who use drugs in Australia (375)
  • Erica Franklin: Developing and implementing peer-led harm reduction and healthcare interventions at music festivals in New South Wales, Australia (942)
  • Michael Whelan: Of Ice and Men: Peer led outreach aimed at reducing AoD harms at Melbourne dance parties (511)
  • Carolina Ahumada: Feel Good Inc. Drugs, youth and nightlife from an intersectional perspective (1039)

Creative Arts 1: Prometheus Does Down - A cri de coeur rewrite of the classic Greek tragedy, by a drug user, with assistance of a substance use researcher with a dramatic arts background

Room number: 215

  • Brandi-Dawn Abele: Prometheus Does Down (1003)

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Recipes for Reform

Room number: 216

Australia was once a global leader in harm reduction and innovative drug policy. How can we become global pioneers in drug policy reform again?

• Devin Bowles, ATODA: Creating a jurisdictional ecosystem to optimise harm reduction policy and practice
• Sione Crawford, Harm Reduction Victoria: The 7 Demandments: Sharing Harm Reduction Victoria's Advocacy Platform
• Mary Harrod, NSW USers & AIDS Association: Building a case for peer inclusion: Building policy momentum in NSW as a precursor to (possible) genuine reform
• Nick Kent, SSDP Australia: SSDP Australia & the BeHeardNotHarmed campaign: Challenges and opportunities for youth campaigning
• Kayla Greenstein, SSDP Australia: TGA Rescheduling of MDMA & Psilocybin: Analysis from SSDP Australia's National Research Circle

Side meeting 8: The Rest is (Drug) Politics

Room number: 206

What are the obstacles that elected officials face when addressing drug policy? What strategies should we employ to engage with and persuade elected officials? Join our esteemed speakers to hear about their experience of drug policy as elected officials and for a frank discussion how we can best effect change.

Speakers:
Geoff Gallop, former Premier of Western Australia
Richard Di Natale, former Australian federal senator
Hon. Esther Passaris, Nairobi County Member of the National Assembly of Kenya
Fiona Patten, former member of the Victorian Legislative Council

Session co-hosted by cohealth and chaired by Greg Denham, Community Partnerships Facilitator for cohealth.

Workshop 3: Promoting decriminalisation and solidarity across movements

Room number: 217

  • Nang Pann Ei Kham: Promoting decriminalisation, and solidarity across movements (346)

17:00

Side meeting 1: LGBTQ+ Networking & Touch base Re-launch

Room number: Courtyard Room 1

Thorne Harbour Health will be holding an afternoon networking event for LGBTIQ+ friends/ allies and relaunching their online platform Touchbase. Touchbase (touchbase.org.au/mental-health) is a national website providing information on alcohol and drug use as well as mental health and sexual health for LGBTI communities — the website is a comprehensive resource assisting LGBTI people to better manage their own health and well-being.

Light refreshments, afternoon tea and snacks will be provided.

To confirm attendance at the event, simply email your RSVP to rsvp@thorneharbour.org.

Side meeting 9: Supporting people who use drugs in Africa – What’s working in policy and practice?

Room number: 218

Recent years have seen significant progress on drug policy reform and roll out of harm reduction programming in Africa. Nevertheless, challenges remain - coverage of harm reduction services remains low, stigma and discrimination around drugs and the people who use them persists, and drug laws and policies largely reflect a punitive approach.
Join a diverse panel of speakers from across the continent to learn more about what's working in drug policy reform, gain insights into current programmes that support access to health and rights, and hear from communities and policy makers on how to ensure people who use drugs don't get left behind.

Refreshments provided. To confirm your attendance, please email rsvp@eltonjohnaidsfoundation.org.

19:00

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Anarchotics Anonymous Presents: Stigma, Drugs & State Control

Room number: Catalyst Social Change Centre

An anarchist analysis of how the drug war informs 'addiction/recovery' narratives, and contributes to user-phobia and self-stigma within our own communities.

Dialogue Space

10:30-11:00Mapping festival harm reduction in Australia, Stephanie Tzanetis, 145
11:00-11:45The fight for AOD workers right - Important for workers, important for drug users, Andy Sinclair, 325
11:45-12:30Impressions of MOUD treatment - Clients perspectives on barriers, facilitators and cultural connection in an Indigenous Harm Reduction Program, Alexandra Perron, 364
12:30-13:00Providing drug users with opportunities for creative self expression can be a form of harm reduction: one users experience, Megan Moses, 318
13:30-14:00Queering Harm Reduction, Marie Ferraro, 363
14:00-15:00Naloxone Now: Expansion of Naloxone Access in Michigan, a Midwestern USA State, Pamela Lynch, 1076; Prison Harm Reduction: the digital age, Katherine Tree, 320
15:00-15:30Emergency Department Harm Reduction, Elizabeth Samuels, 891
15:30-16:0010 Year of Sex Worker Leadership in Grantmaking: Debunked Myths & Lessons for Funders, Alexis Wilson Briggs, 276
16:00-16:30Beyond evidence translation: evidence making and gathering as systemic advocacy and policy, Ginny McKinnon, 768
16:30-17:00Elicited Secrets: Emotion and the Ethics of Disclosure in Qualitative Research on Drug Use, Simon Clay, 53

Posters

Tuesday April 18

09:00

Plenary 2: COLLECTIVE LIBERATION: RADICAL APPROACHES TO HEALTH

Room number: Plenary 3 & VIRTUAL

Chair: Rafi Torruella, Intercambios Puerto Rico and Housing Works
Speakers:

  1. James Ward, Poche Centre for Indigenous Health at The University of Queensland, Australia
  2. Seree Nonthasoot, Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Thailand
  3. Phelister Abdalla, Kenya Sex Workers Alliance, African Sex Workers Alliance, Global Network of Sex Work Projects, Kenya
  4. Yevgeniya Kuvshynova, Convictus, Ukraine

10:30

Morning break

11:00

Major 5: The Master's Tools: Decolonising Drug Policy

Chair: Ricky Gunawan

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Shaun Shelly: Imperialism through funding: How funding from the US undermines harm reduction and human rights in Africa (668)
  • Victoria Wynecoop-Abrahamson: Indigenizing Harm Reduction at the Intersections of Domestic Violence, Mental Health, and Substance Use (1075)
  • Colleen Daniels: Decolonizing Drug Policy (805)
  • Christopher Abuor: Decolonizing Drug War: Establishing legal and policy framework to enhance Access to Harm Reduction Services in Kenya - Case of Kenya (824)

Major 6: The Global Response to Opiate-Related Overdose

Chair: Sarah Evans

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Patricia Tracey: Rapid Response to Near Fatal Overdose (592)
  • Peter Davidson: Scaling low-threshold naloxone-on-release to large jail systems (866)
  • Haobam Nanao: community led Overdose Management Success, challenges and way forth (752)
  • David Baxter: Ten Years on: The evolution of Take-Home Naloxone provision in the Australian Capital Territory (1049)

Major 7: Keep your Morals to Yourself! The Ethics of Harm Reduction

Chair: Monique Tula

Room number: 219

  • Melodie Garcia: Harm Reduce the ego: Decentralizing ego in social service provision (207)
  • Marianne Jauncey: Strength in Solidarity - Finding your tribe within the Harm Reduction sector (782)
  • Chris Rintoul: Culture change in an English drug treatment service provider: Rebooting harm reduction after a decade of an abstinence agenda. (23)

Major 8: Health in Detention: Access, Barriers and Experiences

Chair: Alex Stevens

Room number: 220

  • Mmabotse Violet Maodi: LIFE BEYOND A PRISON SENTENCE FOR WWUD (433)
  • Jocelyn Chan: Impacts of incarceration on drug use and health outcomes among a cohort of people who inject drugs in Australia (747)
  • Barry Zack: Prison Linkage to Community Care: An Effective Harm Reduction Model (7)
  • Christophe Huynh: Experiences of barriers and facilitators in opioid agonist treatment access and maintenance before and after release among incarcerated individuals in Quebec (45)

Wellbeing 2: Self Care for Harm Reductionists and Providers Mini Retreat

Room number: 211

  • Dr. Orisha Bowers: Self Care for Harm Reductionists and Providers Mini Retreat (1078)

Workshop 4: Building solidarity and integrated Chemsex/High Fun/PnP services in your locale/regionIntegrated services for chemsex

Room number: 217

  • Ben Collins: Building solidarity and integrated Chemsex/High Fun/PnP services in your locale/regionIntegrated services for chemsex (90)

12:00

Side meeting 1: Blak Harm Reduction Meeting Lunch

Room number: 215

More and more people are now talking about the issues facing Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and Māori people. These are not new conversations but the voices are getting louder, whether it's talking about another inquest over yet another Aboriginal death in custody, or finding a way to decolonise oppressive systems.

The Blak Harm Reduction meeting is specifically for Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and Māori people to promote a dialogue that: centers racial equity across the harm reduction framework, including in drug policy, public health, and criminal justice; elevates the history and current role of Blak people in the movement; and identifies and advances recommendations to reduce the harms of these intersecting systems on Blak people and other marginalized groups.

Lunch provided.

12:30

Lunch break

12:30

Side meeting 2: Workshop on the Implementation of the New WHO Consolidated Guidelines on HIV, Viral Hepatitis and STI Prevention, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Care for Key Populations

Room number: 218

This workshop will present what is new in the WHO guidelines. More details will be provided on new recommendations such as the HCV test and treat approach for increased public health impact, critical enablers, chemsex and service delivery recommendations on peer navigators and virtual interventions. Also, the new Strategic Information guidelines have implications for KP, and PWID in particular, for collecting individual level data to inform service delivery and program planning. The aim of the workshop is to provide guidance on how to incorporate the priority package into Global Fund proposals. In addition to colleagues from WHO and GFATM, representatives from countries will provide examples of how they have managed to incorporate some of the WHO recommendations or how they plan to do so.

Refreshments provided.

Side meeting 3: Translating Intersectionality and Narcofeminism from Meaning to Action

Room number: 206

Welcome to this interactive event where intersectionality is discussed with examples of application in the context of harm reduction. The session also unpacks the history and meaning of narcofeminism to build understanding and engagement.

13:30

Side meeting: Australian Stream: INPUD Pasifika

Room number: 216

Building a regional network of people who use drugs for Australia, Aotearoa and the Pacific. Led by Jane Dicka, Harm Reduction Victoria.

14:00

Concurrent 11: Resilience and Response: Harm Reduction Coming to the Fore in Crises and Emergencies

Chair: Ganna Dovbakh

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Theresa Caruana: What happens when your pharmacy is destroyed or cut off by flooding? Experiences of opioid agonist treatment consumers and pharmacists in the New South Wales Northern Rivers region. (181)
  • Nadiia Iangol: Emergency Response Project - Shelter's support in Ukraine (974)
  • Aung Yu Naing: Solidarity! Transform Challenges into Opportunities for Harm Reduction during COVID-19 and the Profound Political Crisis in Myanmar (13)

Concurrent 12: Supervised Injecting: Civil Disobedience, Overcoming Resistance and Building Allies

Chair: Ingrid van Beek

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Kayla DeMong: The Little SCS on the Prairies (79)
  • Peter Krykant: How to Run an Unsanctioned Safer Injection Facility (101)
  • Nico Clark: Navigating the development of a harm reduction service in a risk intolerant context - the story of the Medically Supervised Injecting Room in Melbourne (707)
  • Emma Maiden: Not the usual suspects: How we can re-energise the cause for drug law reform and win (52)

Concurrent 13: Do You Mind? A Focus on Mental Health

Chair: Ruod Ariete

Room number: 219

  • Khine Wut Yee Kyaw: The effect of different types of migration on symptoms of anxiety or depression and experience of violence among people who use or inject drugs in Kachin State, Myanmar (469)
  • Laurent Michel: Implementation of a community-based psychiatric intervention among people who inject drugs in the City of Haiphong, Vietnam: the DRIVE-Mind project. (239)
  • Ariel Richer: A global systematic review of interventions co-targeting HIV and syndemics of gender-based violence, substance use and mental health challenges among women who use drugs (774)
  • Simon Williams: Workshop: Community-based mental health support for people who use stimulants (294)
  • Kate Hocknull: Effective care for people experiencing suicidal ideation in harm reduction services: a protocol informed by lived experience, practice and research. (552)

Concurrent 14: Regulated Markets as Harm Reduction

Chair: Benjamin Phillips

Room number: 220

  • Adria Cots Fernandez: Imminent danger: building harm reduction responses to prevent corporate capture in regulated drug markets (949)
  • Corey Ranger: Building Capacity and Solidarity in Prescribed Safer Supply (196)
  • Nazlee Maghsoudi: Equity in Canada’s Legal Cannabis Industry: Research Findings and Policy Recommendations (485)
  • Tim Rhodes: Coca, chemicals, livelihoods: An ecological approach to harm reduction (1071)

Concurrent 15: Cuffs Off: From Social Control to Person-Centred Care (OAT)

Chair: Dilkushi Poovendran

Room number: 211

  • Magdalena Harris: Transforming hospital care for people who use opioids: Implementing NHS policy change (608)
  • Zahedul ISLAM: Assessment of Opioid Addiction Treatment Models in Ukraine – Identifying Good Practices for Higher Admission and Retention (139)
  • Nicharee Pornsittisup: Community Led Methadone Therapy Centre for Ethnic Highland Populations in Northern Thailand Local Solutions Driven by Non-Government Programs (464)
  • Anna Conway: Deimplementation to achieve equity of care for people engaged in drug treatment: a qualitative study of opioid agonist treatment providers in Australia (234)
  • Jamie Cartick: An analysis of the quality of methadone dispensing in Mauritius (793)
  • Kari Lancaster: The social, material and temporal effects of monthly extended-release buprenorphine depot treatment for opioid dependence: an Australian qualitative study (1073)
  • Thi Minh Tam Nguyen: Results after 6-month pilot implementation of the methadone take-home program in Vietnam (582)
  • Danny Ahmed: Diamorphine Assisted Treatment (DAT): A tale of two English cities (78)

Side meeting 4: Consultation on the General Comment on the Impacts of Drug Policies on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights

Room number: 214

The UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (UN CESCR) will develop a general comment (GC) on the impact of drug policies on economic, social and cultural rights. As an authoritative interpretation, a GC is a powerful tool to advocate for reform and hold authorities accountable. Harm Reduction International, together with Dejusticia, EHRA, Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights, IDPC, INPUD, LBH Masyarakat, SANPUD, TB/HIV Care, and Visomutop, will hold a consultation session with Dr. Seree Nonthasoot, member of UN CESCR, on the GC. The consultation will be a great opportunity for civil society to raise diverse issues related to drug policy and their impact on the communities’ economic, social and cultural rights.

We invite local and international organisations, advocates, experts and practitioners to take part in this event, to be held on Tuesday, 18 April 2023 from 2 to 4 PM in room 214.

If you are interested in participating or have any questions about the consultation, please contact Marcela Jofré at marcela.jofre@hri.global, or visit us at the HRI booth.

Workshop 5: BUILDING A MOVEMENT OF PEOPLE WHO USE DRUGS (PWUDs) THROUGH PARTICIPATORY GRANT MAKING (PGM)

Room number: 217

  • Wanja Ngure: BUILDING A MOVEMENT OF PEOPLE WHO USE DRUGS (PWUDs) THROUGH PARTICIPATORY GRANT MAKING (PGM) (517)

14:30

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Infantalised & Under-Represented

Room number: 216

Key voices needed to respond to the complex politics of drugs are subjugated in research, policy, culture and service provision. How can systems and service providers better view, engage with and assign value to under-represented voices?

• Sione Crawford, Harm Reduction Victoria: Shall I get a note from my mum? How stigma impacts the individual and structures
• Baillee Farah, SSDP Australia: Australians who use MDMA and their practices of harm reduction strategies: an SSDP-led scoping review
• Isabelle Volpe, UNSW: Young people and drugs: challenging the role of ‘safety’
• Emily Lenton, La Trobe University: Hepatitis C data justice: The implications of data-driven approaches to the elimination of hepatitis C

15:30

Afternoon break

16:00

Concurrent 16: Check your Product: Drug Checking and Drug Alerts

Chair: Carolina Ahumada

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Ana Cristhina Sampaio Maluf: Developing a drug checking service in Brazil and its potential as a harm reduction strategy (376)
  • Collin Kielty: On-Site Paper Spray Mass Spectrometry (PS-MS) at a Community Drug Checking Service in Victoria, Canada (1044)
  • Bronwyn Hendry: CanTEST, Australia’s first fixed-site drug checking service: Enablers, successes, and lessons learnt from the ACT’s health and drug checking pilot (540)
  • Rita Brien: Co-designing drug alerts with health and community workers as part of an early warning network (324)

Concurrent 17: Peers on the Frontlines: Improving Work Policies and Practices for Peer Workers

Chair: Francis Joseph

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Hau Suan Piang: Glimpses of Peer Leadership as the Prevailing Solidarity Model: a Road to Peer-led Harm Reduction! (706)
  • Shahidul Islam: Effort to bringing professionalism among outreach workers to improve Needle Syringes programme and other essential packages to respond to sudden increase of HIV prevalence among PWID in Dhaka, Bangladesh (223)
  • Liam Neale: FUSE Network Consultations- Identifying systemic barriers experienced by PWU/ID peer workers in Victoria through peer-led networks (759)

Concurrent 18: Drug Consumption Rooms: Delivery and Impact

Chair: Kirsten Horsburgh

Room number: 219

  • Patrick McDougall: Scaling Up Supervised Consumption and Overdose Prevention Services: A Response to Canada’s Drug Poisoning Crisis (382)
  • Marie Jauffret-Roustide: Health benefits and public order improvements after the implementation of DCRs in France. Results from the COSINUS cohort survey (412)
  • Bianca Whiteside: The impact of a supervised injecting facility on public amenity (74)

Concurrent 19: Twin Epidemics: Responding to HIV and Viral Hepatitis

Chair: Eamonn Murphy

Room number: 220

  • Behzad Hajarizadeh: Global, regional, and country-level coverage of testing and treatment for HIV and hepatitis C infection among people who inject drugs: a systematic review (267)
  • Myo Thet Oo: Integration of hepatitis C care in community-based harm reduction services in a remote region in Northern Myanmar. (60)
  • Heather Valerio: GENDER-RELATED DIFFERENCES IN TREATMENT FOR HEPATITIS C VIRUS BETWEEN MEN AND WOMEN WHO INJECT DRUGS DURING A UNIVERSAL TREATMENT ERA: THE ETHOS ENGAGE STUDY (577)

Concurrent 20: Creative Responses in the Face of Challenge and Crisis

Chair: Lena Kucheruk

Room number: 211

  • Tatyana Sleiman: Harm Reduction in Lebanon: Navigating the triple crisis (111)
  • verapun ngammee: Covid-19 pandemic and financing gap challenging and pushing Drug user organization for a Highly performance and Cost effectiveness comprehensive harm reduction service for PWUD/PWID. (628)
  • Goro Koto: Genesis of Japan's Harm Reduction: In the face of fierce backwinds (929)
  • Eliza Wheeler: Remedy Alliance: How an informal buyers club solved a naloxone access problem for harm reduction programs (973)

Creative Arts 2: Poetry, a lens through which to examine our relationship to drugs

Room number: 215

  • Soufia Bham: Poetry, a lens through which to examine our relationship to drugs (546)

Side meeting: Australian Stream: Beyond harm: Building an Australian consensus declaration for drug law reform

Room number: 216

Workshop on building an Australian consensus declaration for drug law reform.

Side meeting 5: Stagnation, Collapse or Reform? The Way Ahead for the Global Drug Policy Regime

Room number: 206

The world is changing fast. Initiatives to decriminalise or regulate substances like cannabis, cocaine and psychedelics are increasingly emerging. In parallel, growing awareness of the devastation brought about by punitive drug control, particularly on people who are oppressed on the basis of race, gender or status, is disrupting zero-tolerance narratives. These developments challenge the rationale of the global prohibition regime that has existed for the past century and push it to breaking point. Does it still have the legitimacy to obstruct these challenges? Can it be reformed to absorb these fractures and pave the way for new, rights-affirming policies? Or will it implode as countries break away from its strictures?

This session will explore these themes through a workshop in which participants will be invited to imagine and explore different scenarios for the global drug control regime, and to define our movement’s strategy within each of them. This will be preceded by two short panels in which leading civil society and UN speakers will set the scene for the interactive debates, with Ann Fordham (International Drug Policy Consortium), Geoff Gallop (Global Commission on Drug Policy), Naomi Burke-Shyne (Harm Reduction International), Ricky Gunawan (Open Society Foundations), and Seree Nonthasoot (UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights) already confirmed as speakers.

Side meeting 6: Ensuring Balanced National Policies for Access and Safe Use of Controlled Medicines

Room number: 218

The session will address global and national efforts to ensure that access to controlled medicines, including those used for OAT, are available at country-level whilst minimizing harms to public health related to their overuse. The side event will invite speakers from UN agencies including WHO, INCB, UNODC, UNAIDS, and civil society groups to discuss medicine access issues at global and national levels in compliance with international drug control treaties.

Refreshments provided.

Workshop 6: A Workshop on Online Harm Reduction Service Provision: Sharing best practices developed and implemented by young people who use drugs

Room number: 217

  • Ruby Lawlor: A Workshop on Online Harm Reduction Service Provision: Sharing best practices developed and implemented by young people who use drugs (456)

17:30

HR23 Social: HR23 Social

Room number: The Decks @ Boatbuilders Yard

Join us for an informal gathering at The Boatbuilders Yard, which is just a stone's throw from MCEC.

A private space - called The Decks - has been reserved for HR23 delegates and will make for a relaxed and fun evening. We really hope you can join us!

The Decks @ The Boatbuilders Yard, 23 S Wharf Promenade, South Wharf VIC 3006

Side meeting 7: HIV and Hepatitis Prevention Treatment and Care with and for People who use Stimulant Drugs

Room number: 218

Both non-injecting and injecting stimulant drug use has been associated with transmission of HIV. The overlapping risks between key populations are not sufficiently addressed by current interventions. As a result, relevant HIV services are not tailored to the needs of specific sub-groups and remain difficult to access.

Participants in the side event will learn more about specific situations and how to address HIV among people who use stimulant drugs focusing on specific key populations.

The side event will consist of:
a) Overview of the epidemiological situation related to HIV and stimulant drug use
b) Introduction of the UNODC new guide "HIV Prevention, Treatment, and Care for People Who Use Stimulant Drugs"
c) Lessons learned

Target audience: community representatives, programme implementation specialists, public health officials

Refreshments provided.

Dialogue Space

11:00-11:30Delivering Drug Checking Down Under: A Quarter Century of Activism & Advocacy, David Caldicott, 704
11:30-12:30Making Change - Navigating a path to advocacy success: Melbourne's first injecting room, Greg Denham, 126; #decriminalize campaign - behind the scenes of creating one of the most recognizable harm reduction campaigns in Norway., Natalia Mojzych, 856; From pain to politics: SJ Finn, founder of International Overdose Awareness Day discusses the optics of campaigning in the drug field, SJ Finn, 260; Interventions to reduce stigma towards people who inject drugs among the Australian public and health care workers, Loren Brener, 388
12:30-13:00Decolonizing and Emancipating Harm Reduction: A Practice of Radical Love, Humility and Solidarity, Tanagra Melgarejo, 1079
13:00-13:30Criminal justice settings for the delivery of hepatitis C care, Rebecca Winter, 938
13:30-14:00INSIDE THE TENT: EMPOWERING COMMUNITY AT ALL LEVELS OF THE NATIONAL RESPONSE, Carrie Fowlie, 580
14:00-15:304 years of Drug Consumption Rooms in Mexico and Latin America: synthesis of harm reduction program led by peers to address the opioid crisis through organized civil disobedience., Said Slim, 921; For Us, By Us: Creating a Peer-driven Cannabis Substitution Program, Fred Cameron, 869; Peer Networker Program: Innovation from a Drug User Organisation that bypasses bad regulation, jane dicka, 1065; Peer Leadership - The Experiences with Hepatitis Storytelling Project: A Retrospective, Dan Nabben, 512
15:30-16:00Family Support Services from around the world, Tony Trimingham, 1081
17:00-17:30Vapor Tales: Sharing knowledge and drugs in San Francisco, Daniel Ciccarone, 507

Posters

Wednesday April 19

09:00

Plenary 3: CREATING A POST-PUNITIVE PARADIGM

Room number: Plenary 3 & VIRTUAL

Chair: Colleen Daniels, Harm Reduction International
Speakers:

  1. Tuari Potiki, University of Otago, New Zealand Drug Foundation, Needle Exchange Services Trust, Te Rau Ora, Aotearoa New Zealand
  2. Diego Andres Lugo-Vivas, CET Academic Programs, Colombia
  3. Ajeng Larasati, Harm Reduction International
  4. Nerita Waight, Victorian Aboriginal Legal Service, Australia

10:30

Morning break

11:00

Major 9: Punitive Policy: Prohibition, Progress and Possibilities

Chair: Tamika Jackson

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Ann Fordham: Making numbers count –Assessing The Global Drug Policy Index as an Advocacy Tool (626)
  • Benjamin Phillips: Louder Than Bombs: What Harm Reduction Can Learn From Anti-Cluster Munitions Activism and Modern Slavery Abolition for a New International Drug Treaty (900)
  • Sione Crawford: Can peer workers ever be safe in a prohibitionist world? (159)
  • MARY KATHRYN SISON: PLEA-BARGAINING FOR DRUG CASES IN THE PHILIPPINES: Revisiting Its Mechanisms, and Assessing Its Bureaucratic and Social Impacts (754)

Major 10: Community Works! The Value and Impact of Peer-Led Responses

Chair: Rosma Karlina

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Louisa Walsh: It’s Your Right – a peer led hepatitis C testing and treatment campaign designed by people who inject drugs, for people who inject drugs (119)
  • Thinzar Tun: If there is a Will, there is a way! – A peer-led women “cost-effective” service delivery in rural areas in Myanmar. (WHRIN good practice series) (128)
  • Vincent de Maisonneuve: Making a peer run magazine by and for people who use drugs : adapting to new realities. (489)
  • Petrina Hilton: W3 Project: Creating a consolidated evidence base of the effectiveness of Australian peer-led organisations for people who use drugs (550)

Major 11: Friends or Foes? Police Powers and Health

Chair: Chris Abuor

Room number: 219

  • Alexandria Macmadu: Characteristics of events in which police responded to overdoses: An examination of incident reports in Rhode Island, USA (103)
  • Ben Mostyn: Harm Reduction, Institutions, and Police Powers: How to Achieve Real Legislative Reform (923)
  • Ambika Satkunanathan: The Process is the Punishment: Impact of Punitive and Carceral Approaches to Drug Control on Women (68)

Major 12: Strengthening Harm Reduction through Research

Chair: Alisa Pedrana

Room number: 220

  • Rossio Motta-Ochoa: Adaptation of harm reduction interventions to the living conditions of Indigenous people: Lessons from the first Managed Alcohol Program in Montreal (639)
  • Annie Madden: Community-Led Research on the Values & Preferences of People Who Inject Drugs in relation to HIV, Viral Hepatitis & STI Services (1085)
  • Courtney McKnight: Understanding known and unknown fentanyl use: a mixed methods examination of drug overdose risk among people who inject drugs (PWID) during a spike in fatal drug overdose (669)
  • Catherine Mwangi: Empowering the voiceless: A South-South Community Based Participatory Research Project Exploring Intersectional HIV Vulnerabilities Among Sex Workers, Women and Non-Binary People who Use Drugs in Kenya. (418)
  • Martin Bastien: Cannabis self-cultivation in the French prohibitive context: Results from an online survey on daily cannabis users (290)
  • Olivia Price: Vaccination uptake among people who inject drugs: a systematic review (558)
  • Samantha Colledge-Frisby: The global coverage of interventions to prevent and manage drug-related harms among people who inject drugs: a systematic review of the evidence (63)

Side meeting 3: Recentering Indigenous Values in Models of Care for People Using Opioids

Room number: 214

Niin-a-wind Anji’bide indizhinikaazowin
We are Anji’bide
Niin-a-wind wiiji’ Anishinaabe anji bimadiziwin
We help our people change their paths
Niina--wind wiiji’ Anishinaabe Mino bimadiziwin
We help our people live a good life
Chi Miigwech Bizin-dow-iwag
Thank you for listening to me

  • Ogimaa Giizhig Binesi, member of the Anji’bide Community Advisory Board

Anji’bide (Ojibwe for Changing our Paths) was born of a need to address opioid overdose deaths stemming from trauma and colonization. Anji’bide is rooted in community innovation and care. Anji’bide is a collective of Indigenous and non-Indigenous helpers, healers, and knowledge keepers. We work together to hold space for each other’s well-being and find creative ways to improve care for individuals using opioids.

Anji’bide centers the Anishinaabe value of Zoongidewin (courage, having a strong heart). We begin with the history of the rural tribal nation (located in current-day upper midwest US), which is a story of vision and strength in the midst of pain. This will reveal the root system for why we are where we are today.

Team members who have developed and lead community opioid programming will introduce these programs. Programs are culturally-based and focus on release from prison, cultural interventions and support (e.g., a healing tree), and family members.

Then we will present the opioid use disorder Cascade of Care framework (based on the HIV Cascade of Care) and summarize information from 20 qualitative interviews with individuals from the tribal nation with knowledge of opioid care. These interviews led to a revised and decolonized Anishinaabe Cascade of Care that centers connection, cultural knowledge, and history. This model is nonlinear and includes developmental stages and individual pathways, and there is space for harm reduction. Funding provided by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (R33 DA049386).

Workshop 7: “Support. Don’t Punish” — A prison abolitionist call?

Room number: 217

  • Juan Fernandez Ochoa: “Support. Don’t Punish” — A prison abolitionist call? (436)

Workshop 8: Understanding the UNODC-WHO Stop Overdose Safely (S-O-S) Initiative

Room number: 211

  • Anja Busse: Understanding the UNODC-WHO Stop Overdose Safely (S-O-S) Initiative (559)

12:30

Lunch break

12:30

Side meeting: Australian Stream: LGBTIQ+ Harm Reduction

Room number: 214

A lunch time conversational session to explore the drivers of harm reduction responses with LGBTIQ+ people who use and inject illicit drugs and community-controlled models of best practice. Led by Nicky Bath, LGBTIQ+ Health Australia.

Side meeting: Australian Stream: FUSE: Victorian peer workforce development

Room number: 216

Exploring how we build culturally safe workplaces for living experience peer workers. Led by Nadia Gavin, Harm Reduction Victoria.

Side meeting 1: Dealing with Punishment: Risks and Rewards in Indonesia’s Illicit Drug Trade

Room number: 206

The 'war on drugs' in Southeast Asia has created conditions for punitive, potentially harmful and ineffective drug policy. We will share a new study based on interviews conducted with prisoners in Indonesia convicted of drug offences. This research addresses the economic and social motivations for entry into the illicit drugs trade and seeks to understand how people navigate the risks and rewards of involvement.

This work forms part of a wider programme of research we are conducting with Atma Jaya University (Indonesia) and the Community Legal Aid Institute (LBH Masyarakat, Indonesia) to map the experiences of people sentenced to death for drug trafficking across Southeast Asia and to test the theory that the death penalty can deter drug trafficking.

Speakers:

  • Carolyn Hoyle (University of Oxford UK)
  • Parvais Jabbar (The Death Penalty Project UK)

Side meeting 2: Modality of HIV Harm Reduction During Humanitarian Crisis in Ukraine

Room number: 218

Since March 2022, UNODC has supported community-based efforts to ensure continuity of care and support for key populations. The session provides showcases of how the harm reduction services are adapted to address the immediate and long-term needs of people who use drugs and those released from prisons.

Speakers:

  • Kharkiv’s Case: Human security and harm reduction. Dr. Volodymyr Kazus, Kharkiv Charitable Foundation “Blago”
  • Poltava’s Case: WUD are part of the humanitarian emergency response. Ms Nadezda Tymoshenko, Charitable Organization “Light of Hope”
  • Focus on people released from prisons: Continuity of care and support. Ms Anna Koshikova, Charitable Organization “FreeZone”, Kyiv
  • New Psychoactive Substances: How war impacts demand and consumption/study outcome. Dr. Sergii Rudyi, NPO/UNODC office in Ukraine

13:00

Side meeting 4: WHRIN Allies Meeting

Room number: 215

Women and Harm Reduction International Network (WHRIN) allies will converge to review network progress and next steps. Conference delegates who wish to learn more about WHRIN are also welcome.

14:00

Concurrent 21: Advocating for Drug Policy Reform: Examples from Around the World

Chair: Geoff Gallop

Room number: 212 & VIRTUAL

  • Machteld Busz: The XTC shop: using art to foster dialogue and investigate public acceptance of substance regulation (166)
  • Alison Ritter: Participation and engagement in drug policy reform (568)
  • Moulay Ahmed Douraidi: Advocacy and actions in the context of the response to the Covid-19 pandemic to improve access to health services for drug users in Morocco according to a human rights approach (969)
  • Erlend Opdahl: From the stars, to the street, to the clinic and beyond. The Patient and the Nurse in the Norwegian Heroin-assisted treatment project. (209)
  • Gloria Lai: Growing intersectional feminism in drug policy advocacy in Southeast Asia (995)
  • Augusto Nogueira: Finding Common Ground amongst Asia-Pacific Drug Policy Civil Society Organisations (809)

Concurrent 22: Treatment by Force: Mandatory Detention and Treatment of People who Use Drugs

Chair: Marcela Jofre

Room number: 213 & VIRTUAL

  • Karen Peters: Ending Compulsory Drug Treatment in East and Southeast Asia (591)
  • Unchisa Eaimtong: A year of radical drug policy reforms in Thailand: lessons learned and gaps that remain (919)
  • Zoë Dodd: The Patient- Prisoner – The Experiences of People Who Use Drugs with Mandated Drug Treatment (735)
  • Peng Xu: No Exit: China’s State Surveillance over People Who Use Drugs (228)

Concurrent 23: Practice and Potential of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis of HIV among People who Use Drugs and People in Prisons

Chair: Virginia Macdonald

Room number: 219

  • Mr.jittraphon chaejaew: Community-led demonstrated PrEP service for PWUD/PWID in Thailand. First pilot under Covid-19 pandemic. (616)
  • Annette Verster: Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention among people who inject drugs: A global mapping of service delivery (1084)
  • Lyle Cooper: A Pre-Implementation Study of PrEP linkage for residents of rural Appalachia who inject drugs: The Appalachian PrEP Linkage at Syringe Services Programs (ApPLS) (620)
  • Félix NIYONGABO: Knowledge and willingness to use pre-exposure prophylaxis among men who have sex with men in Bujumbura city (786)

Concurrent 24: Going Digital: Online Harm Reduction

Chair: Nazlee Maghsoudi

Room number: 220

  • Bruce Wallace: A distributed model of drug checking in response to overdose (371)
  • Luke O’Neill: Reaching the 'invisible' with a phone app to prevent fatal overdose. (25)
  • Angkhana Kantapapa: Highly performance and cost effectiveness innovation increasing N/S coverage during covid-19 pandemic in Thailand. (985)
  • Rhys Ponton: Formulating Microdoses: A netnographic exploration of consumer dose manufacture worldwide (493)
  • Allison Schlosser: #NarcanSavesLives: Strength and Solidarity in Youth Digital Activism in an Overdose Crisis (249)

Concurrent 25: Access is Success: Making Harm Reduction Work for Everyone

Chair: Mark Whitfield

Room number: 211

  • Tasha Turner-Bicknell: Strength in Solidarity: Responsive Programs to Meet Changing Client Needs - Vending Machines, Safer Smoking Kits, and Mobile Units (625)
  • Anekpong Chanthaweesirirat: Stepping up Harm Reduction in Thailand through CBO Agility, Innovation and Commitment (719)
  • Geoff Ward: Integrated services: Making harm reduction work for everyone (1000)
  • Shatyam Issur: A holistic approach to harm reduction services - From prevention, HIV, HCV and STIs testing to the retainment in the continuum of care. (8)
  • Kevin Winder: Peer Based Harm Reduction Western Australia: Needle and Syringe Exchange Program Services and Harm Reduction During a Pandemic (536)
  • Mohammad Shoriful Alam: Depot Holder Approach: a new initiative to increase coverage of syringe distribution in Dhaka City. (539)

Workshop 9: Co-Creating Better Research With Marginalized Populations: Lessons From a Community-Led Study With Sex Workers and Trafficking Survivors

Room number: 217

  • Jill McCracken: Co-Creating Better Research With Marginalized Populations: Lessons From a Community-Led Study With Sex Workers and Trafficking Survivors (304)

15:30

Afternoon break

16:00

Closing ceremony: Looking ahead

Room number: Plenary 3 & VIRTUAL

Chaired by Naomi Burke-Shyne, Executive Director of Harm Reduction International

Former President of South Africa Kgalema Motlanthe
The Hon. Gabrielle Williams, MP, Minister for Mental Health of Victoria
Judy Chang, International Network of People who use Drugs
Paul Hunt, New Zealand Human Rights Commission, Aotearoa New Zealand

Award Presentation:
Brooklyn McNeil Rae of Hope Award, sponsored by the Centre on Drug Policy Evaluation

The Melbourne Declaration

Dialogue Space

10:30-11:00Strength in Solidarity: Bringing together diverse local stakeholders to disseminate public drug information, Penny Hill, on behalf of the Prompt Response Network, 542
11:00-12:00Resilience of harm reduction. Study on harm reduction responses in 34 European cities during COVID-19 pandemic, Daan van der Gouwe, 597; Doors Wide Open: Uninterrupted harm reduction for homeless & disadvantaged PWUD in Melbourne CBD during COVID-19 lockdowns., Richie Goonan, 564; Impacts of COVID-19 - Impact of COVID-19 on the harm reduction service in the MENA region, Elias Al Aaraj, 967
12:00-12:30Advancing a Harm Reduction Ethic in a Larger Organization, Lee Hodge, 297
12:30-13:00Can harm reduction go big without being co-opted?, Stacey McKenna, 300
13:00-14:00Naomi Burke-Shyne in Conversation with Pat O'Hare, HRI Founder
14:00-14:45Shaping the harm reduction space, especially for transgender and Gender Diverse First Nations communities, Marnie O'Rourke, 554
14:45-15:15We gotta burn it down! Finding freedom in the intersection of reproductive justice and harm reduction, Tamika Jackson, 1080

Posters