Más de 200 asociaciones urgen al gobierno de Biden a priorizar soluciones de salud pública para frenar la crisis de sobredosis y desmantelar la guerra contra las drogas

VOCAL NY - Photo available at facebook.com/VOCALNY/photos

Noticias

Más de 200 asociaciones urgen al gobierno de Biden a priorizar soluciones de salud pública para frenar la crisis de sobredosis y desmantelar la guerra contra las drogas

20 enero 2021

Grupos de políticas sobre drogas urgen al gobierno entrante de Biden a priorizar la reducción de daños sobre la criminalización. Más información, en inglés, está disponible abajo.

Over 200 drug policy, harm reduction, health care, and community based organizations from across the country today sent a letter to Rahul Gupta, Team Lead for the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) on President-Elect Biden’s Transition Team. The letter urges the Biden administration to implement proven, bold solutions to curb the overdose crisis and begin dismantling the drug war. Led by People’s Action, VOCAL-NY, the Drug Policy Alliance, and National Harm Reduction Coalition, the letter also makes clear the disproportionate consequences the drug war and overdose crisis have on Black, Brown, and low-income communities, which have contributed to the U.S. leading the world in mass incarceration and preventable overdose deaths.

“Like the President-elect, we too have watched the nation stigmatize our loved ones for substance use, and, instead of judging, we unconditionally love and support them. And, like the President-elect, we too have experienced the insurmountable grief brought on by the loss of family members,” the groups wrote. “It is our strong hope and belief that ending the drug war that has inflicted incredible harm in communities across this nation, and centering evidence-based solutions to address the overdose crisis, could be a great catalyst for a national transformation.”

In the letter, the groups outline immediate and longer-term policy recommendations based on to combat the overdose crisis and begin dismantling the drug war.