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Volume 22 Supplement 1

Community-based drug research in the United States

Research

Publication of this supplement was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number U24DA057611. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. The articles have undergone the journal's standard peer review process for supplements. The Supplement Editors declare that they have no competing interests.

Edited by Gillian Kolla, Emmanuel Oga, Susan Sherman, Mary Ellen Mackesy-Amiti, Alex Kral, abd Jessica Duncan Cance.

  1. Novel strategies are needed to engage people who use stimulants into the continuum of addiction care. Contingency management (CM) is the most effective intervention for stimulant use disorder and may engage no...

    Authors: Linda Peng, Erin Stack, Alexis Cooke, Bryan Hartzler, Ryan Cook, Gillian Leichtling, Christi Hildebran, Judith Leahy, Kelsey Smith Payne, Lynn Kunkel, Kim Hoffman and P. Todd Korthuis
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2025 22(Suppl 1):72
  2. Death from opioid use is a growing public health concern, with stark racial and ethnic disparities. The randomized controlled trial described here aims to improve initiation and engagement in harm reduction se...

    Authors: Simon Kapler, Hira Hassan, Alexander Jeremiah, Katurah Bryant, Presto Crespo, Nesta Felix, Sónyi Elena Lopez, Antonio Morales, Sean Reeves and Ayana Jordan
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2025 22(Suppl 1):74
  3. More than one million people have died from drug overdose in the United States in the past 20 years. The overdose crisis started in the late 1990s with the proliferation of overdoses involving prescription opi...

    Authors: Cerdá Magdalena, L. Allen Bennett, B. Collins Alexandra, N. Behrends Czarina, Santacatterina Michele, Jent Victoria and D. L. Marshall Brandon
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2025 22(Suppl 1):76
  4. Syringe services programs (SSPs) reduce the risk of overdose by distributing supplies like naloxone. SSPs also support clients in meeting their basic needs via referrals to organizations providing food, housin...

    Authors: Rachel E. Gicquelais, Caitlin J. Conway, Mikaela Becker, Erika J. Bailey, Cullen Bosworth, Rebecca Miller, Katy Mijal, Emmie Curran, Bianca Barredo, Sydney Taylor, Elizabeth Salisbury-Afshar, David W. Seal, Marguerite Burns and Ryan P. Westergaard
    Citation: Harm Reduction Journal 2025 22(Suppl 1):81