EditorialDeborah Krauss with her daughter in Osceola, Iowa, where she dropped off supplies for an opioid user, including syringes, clean smoking pipes and overdose-reversing medication, Nov. 18, 2022. (Kathryn Gamble/The New York Times)
EditorialKellene Mulcahy operates a harm reduction program out of the trunk of her car, with clean cookers to dissolve illicit drugs, tourniquets and syringes to inject them, condoms, Band-Aids and fentanyl test strips, in Manchester, N.H., June 2, 2022. (Sophie Park/The New York Times)
EditorialSyringes of the COVID-19 made by Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine for a vaccination site at a high school in Berkley, Mich., Jan. 20, 2021. (Emily Elconin/The New York Times)
EditorialAn advertisement from the city on a subway about the importance of having naloxone to combat overdoses in New York, March 16, 2018. (Ryan Christopher Jones/The New York Times)
EditorialA bin filled with used syringes and empty COVID-19 vaccine bottles following a vaccination clinic in Norristown, Pa. on Thursday, Dec. 23, 2021. (Kriston Jae Bethel/The New York Times)
EditorialA nurse fills syringes in preparation for a COVID-19 vaccination campaign for employees of hospitals in the Ludwig Maximilians University system in Munich on March 23, 2021. (Laetitia Vancon/The New York Times)