Unconditionally safe: how the drug using community helps each other when healthcare services fail

While housing shelters and other care services neglect drug users in need, the non-judgmental support within the drug-using community is a vital lifeline

Why It Matters

From 2016 to 2021, Canada saw around 26,690 apparent opioid toxicity deaths. Without recognizing the power of peer support and non-judgement, many social service and community intervention organizations may be relying on outdated and colonial methods of doing their life-saving work.

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Content warning: This story mentions drug addiction.

In the heart of Boston, between warehouses and industrial parks, lies the Mass and Cass neighbourhood. Often seen as a drab area by most locals, Brendan Little describes it as a place that โ€œwasnโ€™t designed for people to be there.โ€ And yet, itโ€™s become and continues to be home to a strong community of people who live in encampments, and many of whom use drugs.ย 

When Little was growing up in Boston, in a particularly dysfunctional family, he found solace in the streets โ€” in areas like Mass and Cass. He found a community of kids in the downtown area who, l

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