Perspectives of syringe services program operators in Michigan on their relationship with substance use treatment: a qualitative study
Molly C. Reid, Samantha J. Harris, Suzanne M. Grieb, Sabrina Gattine, Zekiye Lukco, Brandon Hool, Mary Aguirre, Fernanda Alonso Aranda, Catherine Tomko, Sara Whaley, Brendan Saloner, Sean T. Allen

TL;DR
This study explores how substance use treatment providers in Michigan respond to expanded harm reduction services, highlighting barriers like stigma and lack of collaboration.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the challenges and opportunities for collaboration between harm reduction and treatment providers.
Findings
SUT providers often showed reluctance to accept harm reduction supplies due to stigma and lack of awareness.
SSP operators faced difficulties connecting clients to evidence-based SUT providers.
Building relationships and educating providers about harm reduction is essential for effective collaboration.
Abstract
Substance use treatment (SUT) and harm reduction are often perceived as having distinct goals despite people who use drugs routinely having needs that encompass both services. The co-occurring SUT and harm reduction needs of people who use drugs warrant collaboration between service providers. However, little work has explored such collaborations, or lack thereof. This research explores how SUT providers responded to expanded harm reduction programming from the perspectives of syringe services program (SSP) operators in Michigan. We conducted in-depth, semi-structured interviews with a geographically diverse sample of SSP operators (n = 19) in Michigan during October and November 2021. The interview guide broadly explored the contributing factors to SSP implementation, including SSP relationships with SUT providers. Analyses of transcribed interviews were conducted using an iterative,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV, Drug Use, Sexual Risk · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes · Opioid Use Disorder Treatment
