Message of hope, harm reduction services draws crowd

Published 4:27 pm Thursday, October 17, 2019

When it comes to helping people afflicted with drug addiction, Michelle Mathis emphasized the importance of “meeting people where they are” and addressing their specific needs.

Mathis, who is the executive director of Olive Branch Ministry, a faith-based harm reduction outreach organization in the state, said when trying to help people, there is no uniform plan that works for all.

“We don’t know what journeys they’re on, we don’t know what their goals are,” she said. “We don’t know what traumas they’ve experienced as a child, what dramas they may be living through right now in their current life.”

Mathis spoke Thursday morning at Salem United Methodist Church during a breakfast event focused on the opioid crisis and how the community, especially the church, can help combat the issue. The breakfast was sponsored by the North Carolina Council of Churches, a statewide ecumenical organization that promotes Christian unity.

Olive Branch Ministry, which serves seven counties in the western part of the state, helps distribute Narcan (medication that reverses opioid overdoses), participates in syringe exchange and works with the Gaston County Opioid Overdose Response Team.

Mathis spoke to the crowd about the importance of harm reduction.

Similar to a child wearing a helmet while riding his bike or a person wearing a seat belt while driving, “we already implement harm reduction every day,” Mathis said.

She said harm reduction involves reducing high risk behaviors and the risks associated with them.

For people battling drug addiction, reducing high-risk behavior can mean going to a detox center or a clinic, getting medication-assisted treatment or reaching out to someone who will talk to them and listen.

Many people are scared to tell their loved ones or reach out to someone, she said, and so they often use drugs alone and are at a higher risk of overdosing and dying.

Mathis said what is most important is offering people hope that they can turn their lives around.

“At Olive Branch we say we extend hope and through extending hope we extend life,” she said.

There are many ways church congregations can get involved.

They can offer Sunday School classes focused on substance abuse, host Medication-Assisted Recovery Anonymous groups, volunteer at needle exchange organizations, install boxes to safely turn in needles, get trained and carry Narcan or keep the medication in easily accessible locations.

One of the simplest ways to help reduce harm is by using stigma-reducing language, Mathis said. Instead of referring to someone as an “addict” or “drug abuser,” use “person with substance use disorder.”

Calling the information helpful, Pastor James Laurence of First Lutheran Church in Albemarle said he is trying to figure out how the congregation can offer hope and healing to the community.

At the end of her speech, Mathis, who is a pastor, spoke about Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead. Though Jesus performed the extraordinary feat, it was the people who were willing to get close to Lazarus and untie him that were able to personally witness the miracle.

She challenged the crowd to be like the people who untied Lazarus.

“It’s messy, it’s not always pretty, it doesn’t always smell like flowers and you might get a little something on you, but the people who are willing to get in there and do work at the face-to-face level get to see the miracle and look it in the eye,” she said.

About Chris Miller

Chris Miller has been with the SNAP since January 2019. He is a graduate of NC State and received his Master's in Journalism from the University of Maryland. He previously wrote for the Capital News Service in Annapolis, where many of his stories on immigration and culture were published in national papers via the AP wire.

email author More by Chris