This paper argues that street medicine should be formally integrated into clinical ethics frameworks and medical professional standards as an ethic of harm reduction. Drawing on widely cited harm reduction principles, particularly pragmatism, respect for dignity and incrementalism, this reframing clarifies the clinical duty of care under conditions of structural constraint. The escalating crisis of homelessness, which contributes to premature mortality and leaves nearly three-quarters of people experiencing homelessness with unmet healthcare needs, is a result of systemic exclusion, not individual failure. While traditional harm reduction addresses acute risks like substance use, street medicine extends this philosophy to chronic structural crises, adapting standards to environments where compliance, adherence and stability are unattainable. By synthesising the public health philosophy of harm reduction with clinical practice, this paper demonstrates that street medicine fundamentally challenges the stability assumptions of conventional bioethics. The analysis shows that the four principles of bioethics require reinterpretation: autonomy becomes relational, beneficence prioritises mitigating avoidable suffering, non-maleficence expands to actively counter structural harms and justice is achieved through the direct reallocation of clinical presence. Formalising this ethic is the necessary next step to hold the healthcare system accountable, ensuring that the duty to sustain dignity and life is met for the most structurally marginalised populations.
Joseph Pham (Wed,) studied this question.