Harm reduction: Meeting people where they are

Across behavioral health, there is a growing recognition that change is rarely linear and that support is most effective when it meets people where they are. Harm reduction is an approach grounded in this reality. It is practical, person-centered and evidence based.

While often associated with substance use, harm reduction extends far beyond that issue. At its core, it offers a framework for helping people make safer choices across a range of behaviors without requiring perfection or abstinence as a starting point.

What is harm reduction?

Harm reduction refers to strategies designed to reduce the negative consequences of health-related behaviors, rather than insisting those behaviors stop entirely.

This distinction is key. Traditional models often frame success as abstinence, but harm reduction recognizes that:

  • Behavior change is complex and gradual
  • People have different goals, and levels of readiness
  • Even small changes can lead to meaningful improvements in health outcomes

Decades of research demonstrate that harm reduction approaches are effective, feasible and cost-effective. They improve engagement in care, reduce the transmission of infectious diseases and connect people to broader health and social supports.

Naloxone: A life-saving strategy

One of the most well-known and evidence-based harm reduction strategies is Naloxone, a medication that rapidly reverses opioid overdoses. Naloxone is safe, easy to administer and can be used by bystanders – including friends, family members and community members – making it a critical tool for preventing overdose deaths, particularly in community settings where overdoses are most likely to occur.

A robust body of peer-reviewed research demonstrates its impact at both individual and community levels:

  • A systematic review and meta-analysis found survival rates of 92–98% in overdose reversals involving Naloxone, with more than 10,000 documented overdose reversals across studies.
  • Population-level analyses show measurable reductions in overdose mortality following implementation of community Naloxone distribution programs.
  • A large multi-state U.S. study found a 37% reduction in opioid-related overdose deaths involving stimulants in communities implementing comprehensive interventions that included Naloxone distribution.

These findings underscore Naloxone’s role as a cornerstone of substance use recovery efforts – saving lives in the moment while creating opportunities for ongoing engagement in treatment.

Harm reduction in Illinois

Harm reduction programs across the state are expanding access to Naloxone, drug-checking tools and community-based outreach that brings services directly into neighborhoods.

Recent Illinois-based case studies highlight how these approaches are being adapted to meet real-world needs:

  • A mobile drug-checking pilot in Chicago demonstrated the feasibility of providing people who use drugs with timely information about the presence of substances such as fentanyl in the local drug supply. This supports safer decision-making in an increasingly unpredictable, high-risk landscape.
  • A door-to-door outreach model implemented across several Illinois communities brought Naloxone, test strips and education directly to residents in high-risk areas. The initiative showed strong engagement and acceptability, with many residents expressing interest in training and supplies. It also demonstrated how direct outreach can help overcome barriers such as stigma, distrust and lack of access.

Core principles of harm reduction

Harm reduction is more than a set of interventions, it is a philosophy of care. Research identifies several guiding principles that can be applied across health care and behavioral health settings:

  • Humanism: Treat people with dignity, respect and compassion
  • Pragmatism: Recognize that “perfect” health behavior is unrealistic
  • Individualism: Tailor care to each person’s needs, goals and strengths
  • Autonomy: Support individuals in making informed choices about their own care
  • Incrementalism: Value small, positive steps toward change
  • Accountability without termination: Maintain support, even when setbacks occur

Together, these principles shift the focus from “fixing behavior” to building trust, safety and sustained engagement.

Beyond substance use: A broader behavioral health lens

Although harm reduction is most often discussed in the context of substance use, its principles apply broadly across behavioral health.

Risky sexual behavior
Providing access to condoms, STI testing and education reduces harm without requiring abstinence.

Self-harm
Clinicians may work collaboratively with individuals to identify safer alternatives, reduce frequency or severity and strengthen coping strategies over time, prioritizing safety, dignity and connection.

Other risk-related behaviors
From disordered eating to medication adherence, harm reduction approaches focus on reducing immediate risk while supporting long-term change.
The goal is not to ignore risk — it is to reduce harm while maintaining connection to care.

Why it matters

Harm reduction challenges long-standing assumptions about what effective care looks like. It asks providers and systems to shift from:

  • Control → Collaboration
  • Judgment → Compassion
  • All-or-nothing outcomes → Incremental progress

This approach is especially critical in behavioral health settings where stigma, disengagement and barriers to care can have serious consequences.

Evidence consistently shows when people feel respected and supported rather than judged, they are more likely to remain engaged and make meaningful changes over time.

Moving forward

As Illinois continues to invest in behavioral health infrastructure and workforce development, harm reduction offers a powerful, evidence-based framework for improving substance use and recovery outcomes.

Whether through overdose prevention, community outreach or everyday clinical interactions, harm reduction reminds us of something simple but profound: People don’t need to be “ready” to deserve care. They need support that meets them where they are.

About the Author

Written by Adriana Scurto, LCSW

Adriana is the Integrated Behavioral Health Coordinator for the BHWC at UIC. With a decade of experience as a social worker in Chicago, Adriana has worked in both clinical and administrative capacities, most recently providing behavioral health services in an outpatient hospital setting. She is deeply committed to driving systemic change to strengthen the behavioral health workforce and the communities they serve.

BHWC Mission

To increase access to effective behavioral health services through coordinated initiatives to recruit, educate, and retain professionals in behavioral health.