We’re fueled by a commitment to bring these solutions to scale. Here’s what that looks like:
Be a Catalyst for Love, Justice, Community and Connection.
Together, we can create a world healing from harms, free from judgment and built on equity.
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End the Overdose Crisis
We have the tools to prevent fatal overdose deaths. National Harm Reduction Coalition ensures more communities have access to these tools.
Over 100,000 people died from drug overdose last year. The work of the Harm Reduction movement is a matter of life and death.
“This is about people who use drugs saving each other. If your community is wondering what you can do to reduce overdose, get naloxone into the hands of people who use drugs.”
Kristen Marshall (she/her)
Expand Syringe Access
When people who inject drugs lack access to safe supplies, they can be exposed to unnecessary risk of contracting infectious diseases like HIV and hepatitis C.
Syringe access programs reduce this risk by as much as 50%. And they offer a place to connect with other resources like housing, health care, and drug treatment.
We’re launching a national syringe access campaign to mobilize communities to ensure syringe access in all 50 states.
Building Programs, Building
Power – Together
We build stronger harm reduction programs through training, technical assistance, and grant-making.
It takes millions of people working together to create cultural change. We deliver thousands of hours of training each year to help hundreds of organizations learn and implement harm reduction practices.
Through advocacy and action, we seek to change policies that place people who use drugs in harm’s way.
We build power with local leaders to create supportive environments for harm reduction to thrive in their communities.
Meet the Harm Reduction Community
The power of our community is greater than the sum of our parts. Our creativity, power, knowledge, and lived experience is vast. And we hold a shared vision of a world rallying together and healing itself from harm.
Get to know the people of the harm reduction movement.