Harm Reduction Journal (Jun 2022)

Development of a digital platform to improve community response to overdose and prevention among harm reduction organizations

  • Kasey Claborn,
  • Suzannah Creech,
  • Fiona N. Conway,
  • Nina M. Clinton,
  • Katlyn T. Brinkley,
  • Elizabeth Lippard,
  • Tristan Ramos,
  • Jake Samora,
  • Aaron Miri,
  • Justin Benzer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12954-022-00636-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract The overdose crisis in the USA remains a growing and urgent public health concern. Over 108,000 people died due to overdose during 2021. Fatal and non-fatal overdoses are under-reported in the USA due to current surveillance methods. Systemic gaps in overdose data limit the opportunity for data-driven prevention efforts and resource allocation. This study aims to improve overdose surveillance and community response through developing a digital platform for overdose reporting and response among harm reduction organizations. We used a community-engaged, user-center design research approach. We conducted qualitative interviews with N = 44 overdose stakeholders including people who use drugs and harm reductionists. Results highlighted the need for a unified, multilingual reporting system uniquely tailored for harm reduction organizations. Anonymity, data transparency, protection from legal repercussions, data accuracy, and community-branded marketing emerged as key themes for the overdose platform. Emergent themes included the need for real-time data in a dashboard designed for community response and tailored to first responders and harm reduction organizations. This formative study provides the groundwork for improving overdose surveillance and data-driven response through the development of an innovative overdose digital platform.