Logo image
Providing safe smoking kits could reduce harm from meth use – but NZ law won’t allow it
Magazine article   Open access

Providing safe smoking kits could reduce harm from meth use – but NZ law won’t allow it

Jai Whelan
The Conversation
27/05/2025
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/46499

Abstract

New Zealand methamphetamine drug harm reduction drug abuse treatment
Methamphetamine was recently ranked New Zealand’s second-most harmful drug behind alcohol, and is the country’s most injected drug. Injecting drugs is associated with additional risks such as vein and soft tissue damage, bacterial infection and blood-borne virus transmission. Many of these harms have been reduced by the work of the national Needle Exchange Programme, which provides sterile equipment and education to those who need it. Safer smoking kits – including high quality glass pipes, pipe tips and lip balm – would be a useful addition to extend the programme’s harm-reduction efforts to people who smoke methamphetamine. But when it comes to assisting people who smoke methamphetamine, New Zealand offers very little.
url
https://doi.org/10.64628/AA.h9gqaqkt7View
Published (Version of record)CC BY-ND V4.0 Open

Metrics

54 Record Views

Details

Logo image