Harm reduction in practice – The Community Oriented Substance Use Programme in Tshwane

African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Harm reduction in practice – The Community Oriented Substance Use Programme in Tshwane
 
Creator Scheibe, Andrew Shelly, Shaun Hugo, Johannes Mohale, Matilda Lalla, Sasha Renkin, Wayne Gloeck, Natasha Khambule, Senzo Kroukamp, Lorinda Bhoora, Urvisha Marcus, Tessa S.
 
Subject Primary health care; family medicine Harm reduction; Substance use; Community oriented primary care; Behavioural health management; Family medicine; Primary healthcare; Public health
Description Background: The Community Oriented Substance Use Programme (COSUP) is the first publicly funded, community-based programmatic response to the use of illegal substances in South Africa. It is founded on a systems thinking, public health and clinical care harm reduction approach.Aim: To describe the critical components, key issues and accomplishments in the initiation and delivery of evidence-based, community-oriented, substance-use health and care services.Setting: The Community Oriented Substance Use Programme is implemented by the University of Pretoria in four of seven Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality regions.Methods: Quantitative and qualitative data were extracted and triangulated from plans, reports, minutes and other documents.Results: Between 2016 and 2019, COSUP engaged in national and local policy and guidelines development. In Tshwane, it created practical working relations with 169 organisations and institutions and set up 17 service sites. These provide counselling, linkage to care and opioid substitution therapy services to 1513 adults (median age of 30 years), most of whom are male (90%), with similar proportions of clients who smoke (51%) or inject (49%) heroin. It also offers needle and syringe services (approximately 17 000 needles distributed/month) and has built human resource capacity in harm reduction among staff, clients and personnel in partner organisations.Conclusion: The Community Oriented Substance Use Programme offers an evidence-based, public-health informed, feasible alternative to an abstinence-based approach to substance use. However, to translate the programme’s achievements into sustainable outcomes at scale requires health system integration; generalist, patient-centred care; affordable medication in a comprehensive package of harm reduction services; multisectoral partnerships; systematic, continuous capacity development; financial investment; and sustained political commitment.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
Date 2020-05-06
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — descriptive review
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/phcfm.v12i1.2285
 
Source African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine; Vol 12, No 1 (2020); 6 pages 2071-2936 2071-2928
 
Language eng
 
Relation
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https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/2285/3759 https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/2285/3757 https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/2285/3758 https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/2285/3756
 
Coverage South Africa; City of Tshwane 2016-2019 People who use drugs, People who inject drugs, Health care professionals, Health care workers, Peers
Rights Copyright (c) 2020 Andrew Scheibe, Shaun Shelly, Johannes Hugo, Matilda Mohale, Sasha Lalla, Wayne Renkin, Natasha Gloeck, Senzo Khambule, Lorinda Kroucamp, Urvisha Bhoora, Tessa S. Marcus https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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