Abstract
Xylazine-associated wounds are a distinct, novel clinical entity characterized by co-occurrence with substance use, progressive necrosis of skin, muscle, tendon, and bone, and slow healing. In Philadelphia, the specter of limb loss, stigma, and shame has hung over hospital-based care for xylazine-associated wounds among people who use drugs (PWUD) and kept many people away from engaging in care. Continued engagement in harm reduction wound care nursing, however, offers an opportunity for PWUD to address their wounds and their fears with members of the medical world. In the absence of established best practices, harm reduction’s model of risk-reductive care offers a way forward for patients and practitioners alike. Here, “harm reduction” describes an ethic of practical, trauma-informed, patient-centered care. It is this integration of harm reduction into medicine and public health that effectively promotes the safety, survival, and recovery of PWUD across all spectrums of drug use habits and housing stability.
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