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Emran M. Razaghi

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Iran

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Emran M. Razaghi

Emran M. Razaghi, MD, MPH, is the Founder and Director of the Iranian National Center for Addiction Studies (INCAS) and Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran. Dr. Razaghi is also the Co-Founder of the Middle East and North Africa Harm Reduction Association (MENAHRA) He previously served as Director, Bureau for Psycho-social Health and the Health of Youth, Department of Health, Ministry of Health and Medical Education, Tehran. This bureau includes the Office for Mental Health, the Office for Drug Demand Reduction, and the Office for School Health. From 1995 to 2001, Dr. Razaghi was Deputy for Prevention and Cultural Affairs, State Welfare Organization, Tehran.

 

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The Current State of Harm Reduction Policy in the Middle East
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • The Current State of Harm Reduction Policy in the Middle East

    In the late 1980s, Western governments began to adopt drug policies based on the strategy of “harm reduction” (HR), which concentrates on alleviating the negative effects of drug use rather than on reducing its prevalence. This policy shift, largely motivated by the recognition that injection drug use contributes to the spread of HIV/AIDS, soon paid off. Within a decade the countries that had adopted HR as their primary policy had managed to control the injection-related spread of HIV and other blood-borne infections such as hepatitis. The spread of HIV among substance users came almost to a halt in Australia and the Netherlands, which had implemented the strategy vigorously. HR was a victory for not only health systems, which had successfully controlled a viral infection with no known “infectious disease model” solution (that is, a vaccine or effective antiviral treatment), but also for society in that HR forestalled the adoption of ineffective strategies such as segregation, which instead marginalizes drug users and abandons them to their high-risk behaviors.

    February 5, 2015