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OD by Nancy D. Campbell
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OD

Best Seller
OD by Nancy D. Campbell
Hardcover $35.00
Mar 03, 2020 | ISBN 9780262043663

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  • $35.00

    Mar 03, 2020 | ISBN 9780262043663

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  • Mar 03, 2020 | ISBN 9780262357487

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Praise

“Campbell’s deeply researched book is driven by her desire to understand why it took so long for naloxone, and overdose prevention, to hit the mainstream. She discovered a group of varied protagonists — drug users, advocates, scientists and others — whose stories illustrate how naloxone, scientific progress and advocacy slowly shifted social attitudes. Her book offers a riveting and complex look into the history of the phenomenon — and a sense of what a future without ODs could look like.”

the Washington Post

“This work represents an important contribution to the discourse on the opioid epidemic.”
CHOICE

“This comprehensive history of harm reduction advocacy is quite timely and a major milestone given the opioid epidemic that surrounds us, but it will also be of general interest for researchers who study how social movements can motivate changes in scientific research, social practices, and public policy.”
—David Hess, Professor, Vanderbilt University
 
“A fascinating perspective on a hidden—and often horrifying—history. Campbell shows just how much we devalue the lives of people with addiction and how far we have to go in order to have humane and effective drug policy.” 
Maia Szalavitz, journalist and author of NYT bestseller Unbroken Brain
 
“Nancy Campbell has managed to show that, of all the reflecting experts have done on drugs, addiction, and overdose, they’ve missed something rather important: the nature of overdose itself. Campbell’s investigation into the history and politics of drug overdose and the development of the overdose-reversal drug, naloxone, makes a powerful case for a thoroughgoing philosophy of harm reduction.”
Travis Rieder, Research Scholar, Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics; and author of In Pain: A Bioethicist’s Personal Struggle with Opioids
 
“Nancy Campbell offers a moving excavation of the history and social, cultural, and political life of naloxone, a medication that reverses the effects of opioid overdose. A must-read for those of us working on drug policy, OD traces how naloxone moved from a pharmacological tool based in emergency departments to a community intervention that helped sustain a social movement for the humane treatment of people who use drugs. Drawing on research from the US and the UK, OD is instructive for all those of us who care about people who use drugs, and is a valuable introduction for anyone to a complex set of issues affecting the whole of US society.”
Maria McFarland Sánchez-Moreno, Executive Director, Drug Policy Alliance, and author of There Are No Dead Here: A Story of Murder and Denial in Colombia
 

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