Opioid Addiction In Jails: An Anthropologist’s Perspective

In addition to her Rikers Island work with incarcerated women, Dr. Kimberly Sue is medical director of the Harm Reduction Coalition, an advocacy group that works to change U.S. policies and attitudes toward syringe exchanges and other evidence-based approaches to treating drug addiction.

Van Asher

Dr. Kimberly Sue is the medical director of the Harm Reduction Coalition, a national advocacy group that works to change U.S. policies and attitudes about the treatment of drug users. She’s also a Harvard-trained anthropologist and a physician at the Rikers Island jail system in New York.

Sue thinks it’s a huge mistake to put people with drug use disorder behind bars.

“Incarceration is not an effective social policy,” she says. “It’s not an evidence-based policy. It’s not effective in deterring crime. But we continue to rely on it for reasons that have to do with morality.”