Resources

Past Presentation

Harm Reduction Support and Perspective on Return to Use | September 7, 2021

Date of Presentation: September 7, 2021

Type: Past Presentation  

Audience: Clinical  

Program: Harm Reduction ECHO Program  

Keywords: #harm reduction  #return to use  

In this presentation, faculty discuss supporting patients who return to use and how to continue to center safety, compassion, and accessibility while offering Harm Reduction resources.

Recording:

Presented by:

Blue Valentine, Hannah Roy, Dr. Danica Love Brown

Blue Valentine, CHW, Harm Reduction Peer Specialist, currently works as part of a cross-program team of communicable disease, health navigation, and harm reduction staff at Benton County Health Department, as part of the End HIV Oregon Project. Her work includes street and camp outreach, rapid testing, syringe services, client advocacy, naloxone distribution, and HIV and STI education. She coordinates a regional harm reduction group for the Linn, Benton, Lincoln, and Siletz region that has a focus on overdose prevention and naloxone access. Blue began working in Harm Reduction in Los Angeles in 1992. She has extensive experience providing HIV/HCV/STI prevention and testing and syringe services to diverse communities, including people who use drugs, people experiencing homelessness, sex workers, LGBTQ+ individuals, and people living with HIV.

Danica Love Brown, MSW, CACIII, PhD, is a citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma born and raised in Northern New Mexico. Danica is the Behavioral Health Director at the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board and has worked as a mental health and substance use counselor, social worker, and youth advocate for over 20 years. Danica is an Indigenous Wellness Research Institute ISMART fellow alumni, Council of Social Work Education, Minority Fellowship Program fellow alumni, and Northwest Native American Research Center for Health fellow alumni. Her research has focused on Indigenous Ways of Knowing and decolonizing methodologies to address historical trauma and health disparities in Tribal communities.

Hannah Roy, Certified Recovery Mentor and Health Specialist with lived experience as someone in long term recovery. She works with Malheur County Health Department in Ontario, Oregon and works in harm reduction through syringe service projects.

Resources Provided:

Date added: September 13, 2021