Guilford County and local governments across the state are doing what they can to help substance abusers kick the habit – with a special focus now on deadly opioids such as fentanyl. However, public health workers and volunteer organizations across the state are also trying to help protect those who continue using drugs.
One way Guilford County does that is by distributing free kits with items designed to help people stay safer when using drugs. This kit is part of a “harm reduction” approach, which aims to prevent overdoses, infections, and other health risks for people who use drugs.
A new report from the NC Department of Health and Human Services on the programs around the state reveals that most counties have such programs – ones that give out clean syringes and other drug paraphernalia to drug users as a way to help keep them safer during drug use and, in some cases – such as in Guilford County – life-saving overdose reversal medicines.
Some of the items help reduce the role of infections from dirty needles and shared needles.
Much of the dangers of intravenous drug use come not from the drug itself but from the unsterile preparation and injection process that many addicts use. These programs, like the GCSTOP program in Guilford County, attempt to help addicts, at no cost, use drugs in the safest way possible.
At My Pharmacy on Phillips Avenue in Greensboro, users can request a GCSTOP kit at the pharmacy counter from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays.
The kits include the following:
- Long or short syringes – for drug injection.
- Naloxone – a life-saving medicine that can reverse an opioid overdose (popularly known as Narcan).
- Test strips – drug test strips, which help check if drugs contain fentanyl, a powerful and dangerous opioid.
- Sharps container – a hard plastic container for safely disposing of used needles.
- Alcohol pads – small wipes with alcohol to clean the skin before injection and reduce the risk of infection.
- Cookers – small metal containers (like bottle caps) used to dissolve drugs before injection.
- Cottons – small cotton filters that help remove impurities before injecting.
- Sterile water – clean water for dissolving drugs, meant to reduce the risk of infections.
- Ties – elastic bands used to make veins easier to find for injection.
In addition to distributing the kits at My Pharmacy, teams of public health workers and others in mobile units go out into the community in Guilford County and distribute the kits to people in places like Food Lion parking lots, Shell stations and Walgreen’s parking lots. A weekly schedule of distribution sites can be found at https://www.gcstop.org/programs/syringe-services-program/weekly-schedule.
One big benefit of the program is that it creates a human connection between drug users and a support system. These users are often people who might otherwise fall through the cracks of available social services. Often those who begin by picking up the kits, end up being connected with mental health services, drug treatment programs or county social services.
The just-released report from the state on “Syringe Services Programs” (SSPs) covers the programs across the state from July 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024.
The goal of the harm reduction initiatives is to “reduce overdose deaths, reduce transmission of blood-borne pathogens including HIV and hepatitis C (HCV), and connect participants to treatment and care.”
State health officials say these programs play a “vital role in public health, safety, and the provision of compassionate, person-centered care for people who use drugs and people with substance use disorders.”
According to the new report, there are now 50 Syringe Services Programs offering services in 62 North Carolina counties and in one federally recognized tribe. Those programs provided support to about 32,000 people during the time frame covered in the report.
Harm reduction Syringe Service Programs in North Carolina continue to play a key role in reducing the risks associated with drug use; however, the new data shows a decline in participation over the past year. According to the report, SSPs served 31,809 unique individuals – 6 percent fewer than in the previous year. Also, total interactions between programs and participants dropped by 10 percent, with 113,688 recorded contacts.
Hopefully, it’s because drug use in the county is going down, but the reasons for the drop are unclear.
Despite expanded program coverage across the state, many North Carolinians still struggle to access the services. Some program participants traveled from 25 additional counties – and even five other states – to receive harm reduction support in one form or another, which state health officials say shows the ongoing need for more SSPs in underserved areas.
While the programs aren’t required to collect demographic data, some voluntarily report participant details. The majority of those accessing services were between the ages of 35 and 44 (34 percent), followed by people aged between 25 and 34 (28 percent) and those in the 45 to 54 range (18 percent).
Gender reporting varied, with nearly 40 percent of participants choosing not to disclose that information. However, among those who did, 55 percent identified as male, 44 percent as female and the rest reported as non-binary or another gender identity. A total of 79 participants identified as transgender.
Racial data was also incomplete; 34 percent of participants declined to report. Of those who did, 82 percent identified as white and 11 percent identified as Black or African American.
As is the case in Guilford County, the services in other parts of the state usually do far more than just distribute sterile syringes. Many programs offer naloxone kits and other harm reduction supplies like test strips for fentanyl and xylazine, safer sex materials, wound care items and hygiene supplies.
According to the new report, access remains a challenge—especially for “historically marginalized communities,” which face disproportionately high rates of overdose deaths – yet aren’t using SSP services at equally high rates. According to state health officials, this discrepancy highlights the need for targeted outreach and expanded service availability in these communities.
While more than half – 56 percent – of North Carolina’s SSPs are funded by their county governments, many programs are run by non-profits and are facing financial struggles. Four programs in the state reported having no funding at all and expressed concerns about their ability to continue providing services.
The report concludes, “Supporting SSP infrastructure development is key to being able to meet the wide-ranging needs of all North Carolinians. While support for harm reduction and overdose prevention is increasing, SSPs often still operate with extremely limited budgets and work with a variety of funding restrictions that impact their ability to function. Grassroots, community-based SSPs face disparities in funding and report running out of naloxone and harm reduction supplies or having to ration them more frequently than other program models. Increasing access to SSPs and naloxone saves money and saves lives.”
I already know I’m going to catch hell for this but here goes…
If I were to set up a stand and pass out the following items, I would be under the scrutiny of about every LE organization from the Feds on down
Long or short syringes – for drug injection.
Test strips – drug test strips, which help check if drugs contain fentanyl, a powerful and dangerous opioid.
Alcohol pads – small wipes with alcohol to clean the skin before injection and reduce the risk of infection.
Cookers – small metal containers (like bottle caps) used to dissolve drugs before injection.
Cottons – small cotton filters that help remove impurities before injecting.
Sterile water – clean water for dissolving drugs, meant to reduce the risk of infections.
Ties – elastic bands used to make veins easier to find for injection.
To do this in a closed, monitored TREATMENT facility where the patients are monitored and are receiving these items as a part of TREATMENT is one thing. To pass them out willy-nilly is, IMO simply using OUR tax dollars to, for the most part, supporting these people’s habit.
I use to work in a building next to a facility where this went on and while I agree, to some extent, with the statement “One big benefit of the program is that it creates a human connection between drug users and a support system.”, I do not believe it is as beneficial as some would have us believe. I would want to see hard, fast numbers, with supporting documentation, not percentages, showing that we tax payers are not simply supporting the habit of someone who doesn’t want help but instead a handout for their habit.
“Often those who begin by picking up the kits, end up being connected with mental health services, drug treatment programs or county social services.” Again, I want to see cold hard numbers, not guesses or surveys, or “estimated percentages.”
Again, I agree these programs can work but only if there is hard, tight control and monitoring. Uncontrolled distribution of tax payer funded drug paraphernalia for this is no different then the distribution of our money to the pet NPOs of our politicians.
And for those who will bad-mouth me as a cruel, uncaring individual, I went through a program as I described for a problem I had, and at a personal cost (not monetary). I did so because it was the one and only chance to salvage a career and I ASKED for the help. That was just under 50 years ago and I’m still on the path.
Mr. Henry I’m with you 100% on your post. Wasted tax dollars without metrics, the same way I feel about skips non profits and his racist 8 person staff for mwbe. There’s the 500k that would be better spent on the fire department’s
Congratulations sir on your path. Many others should take your route. Stop wasting narcan and time on people who don’t want to help themselves
I totally agree with the last post. I don’t think this is something that needs to be perpetuated by making it easier for people to harm themselves and break the law. I moved from Guilford County about 5 months ago because of crap like this. Wasting their text paying citizens hard-earned dollars. And now you’re telling me you’re going to raise people’s property taxes? Give me a break. Moving from that place was the best thing I ever did. Unfortunately I still have a lot of friends there and I urge him to move every time I see them.
Actually its not waste tax dollars really it’s a big help what gcstop is doing and i should know I deal with their programs and everything else, they could help with social services too ..your the wasted tax dollars by bitching and complaining about a good cause that anyone is actually putting forth the effort you dont understand from a person that’s surrounded by users but could never relate to the facts ans causes of opioid epidemic
nice right
Associate,
I’m sorry, but your post makes no sense from the standpoint of the rambling general content (best description I could come up with).
And if I understand what you were trying to say, you were implying I don’t care about those that try to actually get help. That is far from the truth. There are plenty of NPOs out there that offer help. It should not and is not be the responsibility of government. They can help, but not be the only source of help.
Illegal drug use is against the law. So now, Guilford County and other local and state agencies are
Enabling the use of illegal drugs?? Using our tax dollars to aid and enable illegal criminal activity? If we citizens aid someone in breaking the law, we can get charged and arrested for this type activity. This is totally reprehensible.
Maybe just have RNs administer the drugs for them. Sounds safe to me. This county is sick as the rest of the Country.
I’m glad the property tax values are finally being raised to the “appropriate level”. How else could we afford beneficial programs such as this otherwise?
And if I am wrong, or missed it in the article please tell me, but from what I gather the funding of this program is at the tax payer’s expense, at least to some degree.
According to the article, individuals came from 25 other counties, and from 5 other states to take advantage of this program. The next time you ride around and ask yourself “are more people on the corner?” Remember this article.
We have a serious problem of unhoused individuals. While I am sympathetic to the issue, sponsoring programs that do nothing but exacerbate the issue are the wrong approach. And I can’t think of anything worse than providing “get high” kits on the tax payers dime.
I understand the idea, if they are safe about it, it will cost less in other expenses down the road. This couldn’t be further from the truth, however. Programs like this entice people to flock here, not because they are going to use this service but because they realize the people in charge are idiots who enact these types of policies and programs.
And I guess ultimately, we the people are the idiots for continuing this madness by voting these people into power. Or perhaps I am completely wrong and all of this is exactly what you wanted when you cast your vote.
All that aside, as a lifelong resident, things have changed, and not for the best, at least by any metric I can think of.
I never thought that in my once fair city, I would be in a situation where my 4-year old asked me why a man was “asleep” at an intersection in midtown during the middle of the day. Or why I would have to explain to him why daddy had to get aggressive with a stranger in a grocery store parking lot because he wouldn’t take no for an answer when he repeatedly asked for 20$ for gas to get to a job interview.
Well, I guess we’ll soon see groups of volunteers offering free hand gun safety classes to anyone who commits a crime with a weapon.
Why are the Guilford County taxpayers in the illegal drug business
This is just plain wrong. Giving out drug paraphernalia just encourages continued drug use. It is in a way condoning and encouraging illegal drug use.
I guess our Democratic commissioners and city council want to make Greensboro and Guilford County like Seattle, San Francisco and Philadelphia where drug users flock to the city, get high, walk around like zombies and do what drug fiends do.
I never agreed to have my tax dollars to support substance abuse. But I guess this program will make these addicts act responsibly, yeah right.
Guilford County is going down fast with its woke ideology.
Agree. This is promoting illegal drug use at, “raise the taxes” , taxpayers expense. That’s really stupid, IMO, and will have North Carolina looking more like California’s drug crisis and street scenes. Are they going to hand out “blunt wraps” for marijuana users, crack pipes for those users, shot glasses for alcoholics, loot bags for the thieves….? Freaking Unbelievable !!
Donna,
I’m going out on a limb here, so please correct me if I’m wrong but I get the impression you are just as disgusted with this waste of of tax payer money as I am.
Just a guess mind you.
guilford county is becoming too much.
And all this crap is one reason why we are having to pay so much to Guilford County in taxes. How much more are we as citizens supposed to take?
None! I am moving away from my hometown because of these and many other issues. I can no longer live in a place that infuriates me at every turn. Hope the voters will see where their choices are leading this once wonderful place to live and make some changes.
Well, you have a few choices: pay the taxes, leave the Country, vote them out. Any other ideas?
Your Honor, the State of North Carolina and Guilford County distributed this kit for me to do drugs with! How can you convict me for using drugs with it when such an incentive program exists?
More freebies…poof! My tax dollars being whizzed into the wind.
Put a RN on the street corners near drug invested areas. Have them administered the herion or whatever substance. Then charge them for it.
This county and city are sick!
Nicely written, factual and unbiased article. Really, sometimes a rightward slant is unbearably obvious in RT articles. Its a shame that the majority of rhino subscribers will totally miss the point while ranting about their tax dollars. The facts prove that harm reduction works, and the costs of medical/social crises tangential to drug use are far higher without these programs.
That sounds very good. Now back it up with hard facts. If you can’t, then what you wrote is just pie in the sky.
Totally agree with Patrick Henry and everyone’s comments.
To do this in a closed, monitored TREATMENT facility where the patients are monitored and are receiving these items as a part of TREATMENT is one thing. To pass them out willy-nilly is, IMO simply using OUR tax dollars to, for the most part, supporting these people’s habit. This project just continues the drug addiction. How about getting them help, to get off the drugs, help get them jobs, etc. with our Tax dollars. This is totally ridiculous. Guilford County Republicans and Independant’s get out and vote these Democrats out. They are killing our County.
Pleasantly surprised to see this in your coverage. This program will save lives. I hope some of your readers never experience addiction or have a loved one with addiction, and then complain people spend too much money trying to save their life.
Well NC and Guilford county be fair to all. Don’t forget about those with gambling addiction. Start passing out free lottery tickets, scratch off tickets, cash and casino chips.
How did this work out for San Francisco and other cities in California, Washington & Oregon$ It’s a magnet for more drug users and homeless drug addicts. Stop the madness.
I was trying to find statistical data for SF and CA, but there is none except estimates of their spending, number of clinics opened, number of people trained, and population they serve. There is no actual data on the number of people they have helped rehabilitate or the lives they have saved. The number of drug users has gone up in the last few years.
Having lived in the Bay Area and being there when this program started, I know that the number of needles one must avoid stepping on in the streets and subway system has increased dramatically, as have the people laying on the sidewalks, benches, beaches, parks, stoops, parking garages, and sheltered entrances.
This isn’t something I want my tax money to pay for.
Total agreement Deborah. People getting good feelings “helping the downtrodden” using other people’s (taken at threat of prison) money while not worrying about the collateral damage.
Remember this article and consequences when the election of our city and county representatives comes up. Maybe we will have better choices by then as well.
Maybe the Rhino can re-publish or update everyone on Election Day!
John,
What you outlined is exactly what needs to happen. The main thing is getting voters motivated enough to turn out in the numbers needed to replace this (as Alan calls them) Board of Commissars.
Everyone is for saving lives. How about the following method as opposed to enabling addicts?
STOP USING DRUGS!
And where do all these kit goodies end up? As trash on the streets. It’s OK, property taxes will pay for all this, and more for the faithful.
It is fairly well understood that when you tax an activity, you will get less of it, and when you subsidize an activity, you will get more of it. So, if we increase property taxes on housing, we will get less housing. Likewise, if we subsidize illegal drug use, we will get more of it. I am not sure that reducing our housing stock in order to increase the number and safety of illegal drug users is the best “vision” of the future for Guilford County…
As long as Democrats run Greensboro, it will continue to go downhill, just as it has been going since they took over a couple of decades ago. It’s a sad but true fact that democrats are intent on destroying America. Every city that they take control of becomes a literal dump along with all of their wasteful spending of our tax dollars. All you have to do is take a ride to actually SEE it if you imagine you’re not being impacted in your wallet! If we had known that Greensboro would head in this direction, we would never have bought a house here 25 years ago. I’m tired of my money being wasted on people who do not want to work for a living. I keep hoping for some good Republicans to get voted in so Greensboro can thrive once again.
Dear NON Distinguished guest reporting varied comments. Just because you have an opinion doesn’t mean it’s the favored opinion. Here is what where telling you. Ok, we can apply this program at 70k a year or you can pay 500k a year to support greater overdoses and deaths, hospitalizations, public servant I termination etc. A area of need was identified and the citizens ask for something to be done. We’ll something is being done. You can choose your cancer 70k or 500k a year. I did hear many of you complain about your tax dollars. If you don’t like it. Go to university for six years become educated and we will accept your opinions to apply to the practice of resolving this problem.
…….what?………
Huh? By the way, they’ll be no accountability so your $70,000 number is folly
Found these numbers on Guilford County website. Keep your eye on these numbers. Having known several families who lost young men to drugs in Guilford County, this is a really sad statistic. Focus on catching and licking up for many years illegal drug suppliers and street dealers. Focus on getting folks off of drugs.
More than 1,600 people take the medication Buprenorphine (also known as Suboxone or Subutex) to maintain their recovery from substance use disorder.
In 2022, Guilford County had an overdose rate of 42.4 per 100,000 residents (228 overdose deaths) which is higher than the state average of 41.4 per 100,000 residents.
In 2023, Guilford County Emergency Services responded to 1,313 suspected overdose calls and administered 1,900 doses of Naloxone. From January 1 to June 30, 2024, Guilford County Emergency Services responded to 523 suspected overdose calls and administered 786 doses of Naloxone.
Prevention should be Job 1.
Or, hear me out, we make these dangerous drugs illegal and put these people in prison where they can detox and get off the drugs. Our NC prison system has an excellent program called DART and the resources to actually help people change. I’d much rather pay for that instead of me paying for people to go out and hand out free drug paraphernalia so someone can continue their addiction. I’m sick of this kinda crap. Where’s the “compassion” for me, who doesn’t do drugs and works my ass off and just wants to not have to give 38% (my effective tax rate) of what I work for to crap like this. I get some of you think this is just so great, and if you do, fine, YOU pay for it. I think it’s BS. I watched an interview of a drug addicted lady on the streets and she said something to the effect of, “Why do all these people keep coming and giving me free drug paraphernalia?? I didn’t even use that drug until I had all this free stuff….why can’t they just help me get off drugs??” Well said. Giving away free drug paraphernalia is NOT compassion. It’s enabling. True compassion would be to force these people to a place where they can get OFF the drugs, not enable them to continue to destroy their lives and the lives of those around them.
And it may be one reason why Guilford County is now reputed to be a popular destination for recently released state prisoners…
So, compassion is prison from your perspective? Weird.
No drug kits or narcan problem will soon die out.
We tried that…nope. Didn’t work. Damn people keep living and new ones keep popping up every day.
Yes, Chris, prison is compassion for victims and future victims of crime.
They’ve been doing this in San Francisco for many years and hows it been going?????
Before taxpayer money is spent handling out drug paraphernalia to drug addicts why don’t we take a look at San Francisco to see how successful this type of program has been.
Excellent point Charlie
We need DOGE to come in and look at Guilford Co.
Unfortunately it wont happen under the corrupt grip of a Democrat regime.
This is another example of govt. creating a program that will cause another problem that will require another tax payer funded program to fix.
No spine Stein just following the same ol’ BS.
Every action has its consequences, whether it be hood, bad, intended or unintended. You put poison into your body, it could prove fatal. A known fact we are all taught from early childhood. Why should I pay to support your bad choices? Frankly, I have more empathy for an ant or worm, at least those are contributing to make good things of life by helping our foods & other plants. (That includes several family members who have CHOSEN to put these substances in their bodies.)
Even simple cremations are expensive, but it’s your choice how fast you get there. We The People owe you nothing. Meanwhile I’ll still be waiting on my tax refund from you SOB’s.
put this stuff as ‘bait’ in areas where we (police, fire, parent, school, business ) would prefer they ‘hang-out’
Reading these comments with the exception of two has made me sick to my stomach. What a bunch of self-righteous ignorant people . Have you ever heard the term there but for the grace of GOD go I? When you go to sleep in your ivory towers tonight, maybe you need to get on your knees and thank God that you were not a parent or a brother or a sister of someone suffering from the disease of addiction.
i’m not religious so i do other cogent things to help solve our problem. don’t ask what.