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Ending The Stigmaof Addiction
- Charlotte, NC
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Dangers Of Fentanyl & Treatment Resources
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Access Essential Resources in Charlotte, NC
Where Can You Get Narcan?
Naloxone (Narcan®) is a safe medication that can save someone’s life by reversing the effects of an opioid overdose. It only works on opioids, such as heroin, prescription painkillers and fentanyl, but it is safe to use even if opioids are not present. If you are worried you or someone you know may be at risk of an opioid overdose, naloxone is available to you.
You can find information on how to use naloxone by reading the information included in the naloxone packaging, or visiting any of the following Health Department resources:
Syringe and Naloxone Access
Harm reduction can help. Find the resources you need here.
List of Syringe Services Programs (SSPs) in North Carolina
NC Safer Syringe Initiative Annual Report 2022-2023
NC Naloxone Distribution Toolkit
What is Harm Reduction?
Harm reduction is an evolving set of practical strategies to meet people where they are in their behaviors to promote safer options. This approach can reduce the risks that may be involved with the behavior and supports healthier practices more long-term.
For overdose prevention, harm reduction recognizes a range of drug use practices and promotes ways for people to manage their drug use with a variety of support options. Syringe
services programs, community-based naloxone distribution, and drug-checking are all harm reduction techniques that reduce the risks associated with drug use. Harm reduction is also a philosophy that people who use drugs deserve to protect themselves and their loved ones, regardless of whether they seek additional health services.
Meeting people where they are to provide services allows harm reduction programs to work with participants to address drug use and conditions of use in a tailored manner. It is an effective model: People engaged in syringe services programs are five times more likely to enter treatment for a substance use disorder than nonparticipants.
In North Carolina, you can access free harm reduction resources through our statewide network of syringe services programs, the North Carolina Safer Syringe Initiative.
Syringe Services Programs
As of July 2016, North Carolina allows for the legal establishment of syringe services programs. Syringe services programs, or SSPs, distribute sterile syringes and other injection supplies and encourage the secure disposal of used syringes to reduce sharing, reuse and public safety risks. Using a sterile syringe and new injection supplies for each injection can prevent infections, abscesses and the transmission of hepatitis C and HIV. Programs also provide overdose prevention and response education, including how to administer naloxone, and distribute this overdose reversal tool throughout their communities. These programs can help participants access other medical and social services, including treatment for substance use disorder and mental health conditions, often serving as the primary avenue to meet their health needs.
Most syringe services programs operate according to the practices and philosophy of harm reduction. Harm reduction is an evolving set of practical strategies that reduce the negative consequences of drug use and other high-risk behaviors. It recognizes a spectrum of drug use between chaotic use and abstinence and promotes ways for people to manage their use and to use more safely. Syringe programs, community naloxone distribution and drug-checking with fentanyl test strips are all harm reduction techniques that reduce the risks associated with drug use. Harm reduction is also a philosophy based on the belief that people who use drugs deserve to protect themselves and their loved ones, whether or not they are seeking treatment. “Meeting people where they are” to provide services allows harm reduction programs to work with participants to address drug use and conditions of use. It is an effective model: people engaged in syringe services programs are five times more likely to enter treatment for substance use disorder than non-participants.
Increasing access to syringe services programs is an important element of North Carolina’s Opioid and Substance Use Action Plan to address the overdose crisis. All syringe services programs in North Carolina are required to provide the following services:
Syringe disposal
Distribution of sterile syringes and new injection supplies at no cost and in sufficient quantities to prevent sharing or reusing
Education materials concerning:
o Prevention of disease transmission, overdose, and substance use disorder
o Treatment options, including medication-assisted treatment and referrals to care
Naloxone distribution and training, or referrals to these services
Consultations/referrals to mental health or substance use disorder treatment
The NC Safer Syringe Initiative at the Division of Public Health maintains a list of syringe services programs in North Carolina.
For more information or for assistance in developing and operating syringe services programs contact SyringeExchangeNC@dhhs.nc.gov.
Naloxone Access
A standing order is a medical order that authorizes the dispensing or distribution of a medication, like naloxone or the flu vaccine, to any person who meets criteria designated by the prescriber. North Carolina’s statewide standing order for naloxone, signed by the State Health Director, authorizes any pharmacist practicing in the state of North Carolina and licensed by the North Carolina Board of Pharmacy to dispense naloxone to any person who meets set criteria. These criteria include:
Being at risk of opiate-related overdose due to medical conditions or history;
Being the friend or family of someone at risk of opiate-related overdose, thus being able to respond in case of overdose; and
Being in the position to assist another person at risk of opiate-related overdose.
Naloxone is available under the statewide standing order, without a prescription, at the majority of retail pharmacies in North Carolina and is covered under most insurance policies. First signed in June 2016, North Carolina is the third state in the country to adopt a statewide standing order for naloxone. NaloxoneSaves.org provides a map and contact information for pharmacists that have indicated to NCDHHS they are offering naloxone under the statewide standing order. Pharmacies can be added to the map by submitting the form on NaloxoneSaves.org. For pharmacists, you can view a frequently asked questions guide on using the naloxone standing order here.
In addition, naloxone is available at many syringe services programs and local health departments across the state at no or low cost. Please visit naloxonesaves.org to find your nearest access point.
For any questions regarding naloxone access, training, or starting a naloxone distribution program, please contact naloxonesaves@gmail.com
Our Foundation has been established as Zach’s legacy. We want him to be remembered. Our hope is to connect with families and communities struggling with addiction and provide support in many shapes and forms.
ARG Addiction Treatment Centers:
• ARG owns and operates addiction treatment centers in Atlanta. They provide addiction and mental health care services1. Contact: Phone: (866) 932-5985
Georgia Council On Substance Abuse:
• Recovery coaches offer recovery-oriented, person-directed, and outcome-informed services. Address: 2310 Park lake Dr., Suite, Tucker, GA, 30345. Contact: Phone: (404) 523-3440
MARR Addiction Treatment Centers:
• Established in 1975, MARR provides long-term residential addiction treatment for men and women. Their programs are centered on the Therapeutic Community model. Address: 2815 Clearview Pl, Doraville, GA, 30340. Contact: Phone: (678) 750-4971
Inpatient Drug Rehab Center:
• Offers inpatient addiction treatment for drug and alcohol abuse. Address: 260 Peachtree St NW Ste 2200, Atlanta, GA, 30303. Contact: Phone: (866) 521-4833
Meeting Guide App:
• The Meeting Guide app, brought to you by Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc., is a free-of-charge meeting finder app designed to assist individuals seeking A.A. (Alcoholics Anonymous) meetings and resources.
SAMHSA- Harm Reduction Framework
(Federal Policy)
-SAMHSA defines harm reduction as a practical and transformative approach that incorporates community-driven public health strategies — including prevention, risk reduction, and health promotion — to empower PWUD and their families with the choice to live healthier, self-directed, and purpose-filled lives. Harm reduction centers the lived and living experience of PWUD, especially those in underserved communities, in these strategies and the practices that flow from them.
Getting treatment for problem drinking without giving up alcohol
-An article highlighting decreased alcohol with the help of therapeutic communication
What is HarmReduction? (HRTC)
-Short video; intro Harm Reduction
Stigma and language
-pubmed article explaining how language effects stigma
Stop talking ‘dirty’
-Clinicians and their language; Journal of Medicine
The Rise and Fall of the DARE program
-explains the dichotomy of the DARE program;…”There were clear, inherent problems with setting up cops as drug experts and educators, preaching abstinence-only and expanding the War on Drugs into the classroom.”
Vermont’s Safe Consumption Sites Gets Approved
Housing is Healthcare; Portland Hotel Society