Communities can make changes to reduce illicit drug use. There are a variety of preventive, supportive, and rehabilitative actions available for residents, companies and corporations.
Any individual can play a significant role in creating changes in society concerning drug use. Taking proactive and impactful steps or smaller efforts, like talking to one person or volunteering an hour a week at community events, can grow into a broader impact over time. Your motivation can inspire others to join you, creating a ripple effect that leads to change. Bottom of Form
Below, we will review seven strategies that communities across Canada have implemented and proved successful.
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By combining these strategies, communities can reduce illicit drug use. It can offer opportunities to individuals with the tools, resources, and support they need to lead healthier, drug-free lives.
Author,
Substance Use Disorder & Recovery Professional,
Referral & Consultation Counsellor
2 Responses
I would like to know why the peers that be are enabling drug abusers while condemning smokers. Smoking is not healthy but drug use is far more destructive. Most people who smoke still maintain a virtually useful life drug abusers have destroyed normal use of city streets and community living. But someone who smokes is considered dangerously, dangerous. I don’t understand why druggies get special treatment while those who smoke cigarettes are considered worse. It seems there is a double standard out there that is protecting addicts who use Lethal drugs are better than those who smoke. Smoking is not healthy but it dies not destroy whole communities. And seems to be only a hazard to the person who smokes. But does not leave needles and other dangerous garbage in streets in parks etc. This is no longer a democratic society.
Thank you for your comment Barb. We appreciate your point of view on the matter.