“The people who depended on us became expendable”: Experiences of frontline workers with lived and living expertise of drug use during the COVID-19 pandemic

Abstract Background This paper explores the perspectives of a group of people with lived and living expertise of unregulated drug use who worked as frontline harm reduction service providers and activists in Canada during the dual public health emergencies of COVID-19 and the toxic drug crisis. Spec...

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Main Authors: Kat Gallant, Kelsey A. Speed, Alex Betsos, Brandi Abele, Matthew Bonn, Frank Crichlow, Alexandra de Kiewit, Michael Nurse, Alex Sherstobitoff, Natasha Touesnard, Karen Turner, the National Working Group of People with Lived and Living Expertise, Jade Boyd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-05-01
Series:Harm Reduction Journal
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12954-025-01221-z
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Summary:Abstract Background This paper explores the perspectives of a group of people with lived and living expertise of unregulated drug use who worked as frontline harm reduction service providers and activists in Canada during the dual public health emergencies of COVID-19 and the toxic drug crisis. Specifically, this paper explores their initial experiences at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, their reflections on how these experiences varied one year into the pandemic, and their perspectives on how shifting public health measures and policies shaped their work. Methods Drawing on collaborative research methods, this project was developed with a national working group of people with lived and living expertise of substance use. Three rounds of roundtable discussions along with two sets of semi-structured interviews were conducted with working group members from May 2020 to June 2021. A thematic analysis was co-developed by academic facilitators and the working group through deductive and indictive group coding and reflexive analysis. Results Four themes emerged from the interviews and roundtable sessions: (1) initial negative impacts of COVID-19-related public health measures; (2) societal abandonment, collective anger and grief; (3) navigating constantly shifting public health emergencies over time; and (4) leveraging lived expertise to create positive change. Conclusions The COVID-19 pandemic, in concert with the toxic drug crisis, presented many challenges for working group members on the frontlines to continue their work providing essential services to people who use unregulated drugs in Canada. The experiences shared by this unique group demonstrate these challenges, as well as how the immediate and long-term impacts of these dual public health emergencies provided opportunities for innovating and advocating for sustainable policy changes.
ISSN:1477-7517