Throwback articles from On Our Own of Maryland’s past newsletters.
Stigma is a harmful disconnection caused by prejudging others: thinking, speaking, and acting on what we “know” before taking the time to learn the truth. We’ve all experienced it, prejudging others and being prejudged to varying degrees and for various reasons. It can be intentional or unintentional. It may be rooted in rumor, past experience, or even partial fact. It could be well-intentioned (“Oh, you’re X? My cousin is too, and they just needed Y.”), but even then, it’s still harmful.
Stigma occupies the space where people might be received and truly known. When prejudgment of another overshadows that person’s value, it makes genuine connection between the perceiver and the perceived impossible. Stigma keeps us strangers. And if you start to believe the stigma, you can even become a stranger to yourself.
As the opioid epidemic has continued to rage on, many strides have been made in the effort to preserve life and facilitate recovery. Part of that effort has been expanded access to FDA-approved medications to treat opioid use disorder, such as buprenorphine, methadone, and naltrexone, commonly referred to as MAT: Medication-Assisted Treatment. According to SAMHSA, MAT is “the use of medications, in combination with counseling and behavioral therapies to provide a ‘whole-patient’ approach to the treatment of substance use disorders. MAT has proved to be clinically effective and to significantly reduce the need for inpatient detoxification services.” (SAMHSA, 2022)
Recognizing trauma and stigma in housing instability and substance use
“ A human needs to be out of survival mode before they can truly focus on recovery, because the prolonged toxic stress of homelessness is an ongoing trauma.”