ETSU medical professionals provide different method of combating drug addiction

As opioid and the harmful effects of addiction to them continue to make the news in East Tennessee, a multitude of organizations has provided many different avenues to help cope with their effects or seek help in overcoming the addiction. One such group is doing so in ways some may find unconventional.

Deirdre Gudger, Director of Prevention and Outreach at ETSU Health and the Quillen College of Medicine, said Syringe Trade and Education Program works to provide resources for those struggling with addiction, not just to opioids but any kind of harmful drugs.

“The program was not legalized in Tennessee until May of 2017,” Gudger said.

The program then launched the following year.

At its core, the program functions as a kind of support group, where participants can go seek assistance for a variety of problems relating to addiction. Unlike many other organizations, however, Gudger said they are willing to take the slow approach is it means weaning people off of harmful drugs and injection methods if it means success in the long-term, rather than forcing people to go cold-turkey.

“No one wakes up and says ‘I want to get addicted,’” she said. “We have had people who did not even think about it before they came here.”

Instead, she said the program focuses on quality injection education while pursuing the overall goal of rehabilitation and recovery.

“We want to keep you safe,” Gudger said. “We want to make sure you are not contracting or spreading infectious diseases.”

The program also serves as a means for people to dispose of needles they have already used, as well as providing safe, clean needles for participants of the program to use. For the latter service, Gudger said state law mandates they return every needle participants receive, and the program keeps count.

“When we first started, there were people saying negative things,” Gudger said. “They said ‘Let the trash take out the trash.’”

As a health care professional who has worked in the field for several years, she said this mentality was hurtful to hear, especially since she said recovering from addiction is not a one-day process.

“I do not know many families who do not struggle with this,” she said. “You have to look at it like a diet. Everyone does it, but after four weeks, we see ourselves sliding out. It is the same as any other addiction.”

She said support from law enforcement has been positive, and the program even gives out tickets to give to officers who see them carrying needles in the car. As long as the driver is, indeed, delivering the needles to the facility during business hours, law enforcement is willing to work with the program.

Gudger said the program uses positive reinforcement rather than berating participants whenever they mess up.

“They got ‘You are a failure’ from so many other people,” she said. “We try to be strength-based. We are excited with them.”

Those looking for more information or wish to participate in the program can do so by contacting ETSU Health at 423-930-8337. Their office is located at 615 N. State of Franklin Road in Johnson City and are open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. every weekday except Friday, when they close 30 minutes earlier at 3:30.

SportsPlus

Local news

Early voting in Carter County could break record

Local news

Main Street Elizabethton’s 2024 Scarecrow Contest transforms downtown, public voting to determine winners

Local news

Elizabethton to begin curbside leaf collection in November, continuing through January 2025

Church News

The Power of God’s Word

Community

Upcoming events in Elizabethton….

Church News

Church Briefs

Church News

Roan Street FWB will have homecoming Sunday with music by Loren Harris

Local news

Hopwood Christian Quilt Show scheduled October 25 & 26

Church News

Why did Jesus say ‘Don’t cast your pearls before swine’?

Local news

Halloween celebration comes early to Tusculum U. with ‘Edgar Allen Poe and Other Stories in the Woods’

Church News

Doe River Gorge works with Elizabethton Red Stone Church in flood recovery efforts

Local news

Carter County voters turn out in droves despite chilly weather on first day of early voting

Local news

Breast Cancer Awareness Month: The importance of annual screenings

Local news

Milligan homecoming features president’s inauguration and array of student events

Local news

Storyteller Megan Wells to perform ghost stories at Johnson City Public Library

Local news

Friends of the Johnson City Public Library to hold book sale

Local news

VIDEO: Josh Smith interviews local pastor as Carter County enters new phase after storm

Local news

East TN mobile health center rolls in to help, post-Helene

Local news

Tennessee realtors to offer funding for hurricane victims

Local news

Lee, TDEC announces $1.83 million loan for Chuckey Utility Water District

Local news

Singer-songwriter Dallas Wayne to headline at the Down Home in Johnson City

Local news

Country powerhouse Sara Evans to perform at NPAC October 27

Local news

Actresses Alexa PenaVega and Taylor Dooley serve at East Tennessee Disaster Response

Local news

Avery County man charged with sexual exploitation after social media investigation