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California Expands Program That Pays People to Stop Using Drugs

California Expands Program That Pays People to Stop Using Drugs

We’ll talk about how the program is working and discuss the ethical considerations for policymakers, taxpayers and drug users.

KQED's Forum

September 5, 202355m 45s

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Show Notes

California is the first state in the country to use federal funding for a controversial approach to reducing drug addiction: paying people to stop using. The state has been testing the strategy, known as the recovery incentives program, in San Francisco and a few other counties, for two years and is now rolling it out more broadly.The program specifically targets people who abuse meth and cocaine at a time when stimulant addictions and fatalities have skyrocketed. We’ll talk about how the program is working and discuss the ethical considerations for policymakers, taxpayers and drug users.


Guests:


Héctor Hernández-Delgado, staff attorney, National Health Law Program


Nicholas King, associate professor in the Biomedical Ethics Unit, McGill University


Brad Shapiro, professor of Psychiatry, UCSF School of Medicine


Jaramiah Fitts, participant in the recovery incentives program, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center

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