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Resources & Links

This site provides resources and awareness on illicit fentanyl and the mental health epidemic affecting our community and loved ones.

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Advance Behavior Center

 

Advance Behavior Center
(910) 777-0214
109 E Divine St., Dunn

Aspiration and Miracles
(910) 892-0000
701 E. Broad St., Dunn

Dunn Psychological Associates
(910) 892-5839
102 Tilghman Dr., Dunn

Greater Image
(910) 491-1000
608 A West Broad St., Dunn

Primary Health Choice

(910) 865-3500
219 W. Broad St., Dunn

The Carter Clinic
(910) 207-0830
305 Tilghman Dr., Suite B, Dunn

TriCare Counseling
(910) 249-4219
731 Tilghman Dr., Dunn

Good Hope Hospital
(910) 230-4011
410 Denim Dr., Erwin

Daymark Recovery Services
(910) 893-5727
5841 U.S. Hwy 421 S., Lillington

Harnett Counseling Services
(910) 814-0909
1186 N. Main St., Lillington

Monarch Behavioral Health Services
(910) 814-0825
5847 U.S. Hwy 421, Lillington

Life Bridge Healthcare
(910) 738-7880
2281 Ray Rd., Spring Lake

Life Net Services
(910) 745-8895
1014 Hay St., Fayetteville

Crisis & Assessment Centers

Carolina Outreach B.H.U.C.
(919) 251-9009
2670 Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd., Durham

Cumberland Recovery Response Cntr
(910) 778-5900
1724 Roxie Ave., Fayetteville

Hope Center for Youth & Family Crisis
(877) 888-7849
400 W. Ransom St., Fuquay-Varina

RI International - Durham Recovery Response Center
(919) 560-7305
309 Crutchfield St., Durham

WakeMed - WakeBrook Behavioral Health Urgent Care (B.H.U.C.)
(919) 350-8000
111 Sunnybrook Rd., Raleigh

Harnett County Resources

Community Paramedics
(910) 893-0721
Paramedics to support after overdose

Department of Social Services
(910) 893-7500
311 W. Cornelius Harnett Blvd., Lillington Provides Harnett residents assistance with:
Medicaid
Food Stamps
Daycare
Energy Bills

Health Department
(910) 893-7550
307 W. Cornelius Harnett Blvd., Lillington
Free Opioid Overdose Reversal Med.

Sheriff’s Substance Treatment And Recovery (S.T.A.R.) Program
Re-entry Services and medication-assisted treatment (M.A.T.) in jail

Additional Support

Alcoholics Anonymous Angier Baptist
(910) 639-6114
155 S Hickory St, Angier
Mon & Fri @ 7:00pm (in ABC Fellowship Hall)

Celebrate Recovery Friendship Baptist
(910) 893-5901
6778 US 401, Bunnlevel
Thursday nights at 7pm

JoCo Angels
jocoangels.com
Community organization providing resources and support

Johnston Lee Harnett Community Action
(919) 934-2145
1102 Massey St., Smithfield
Comprehensive support for families in need of assistance
Joshuas Army Fights Fentanyl
joshuas.army.27@gmail.com
Facebook group and nonprofit providing support, awareness, and advocacy

N.C. Harm Reduction Coalition
(336) 543-8050              nchrc.org
Provides support and resources for people who use drugs

Recovery Alive Antioch Baptist Church
(910) 893-5984
6670 Old US Hwy 421, Lillington
Friday nights at 6pm

Surviving Siblings Network
Facebook group for those who have survived the loss of a sibling to drug use


Click on site logos to visit websites and receive more information.



DEA

The DEA was established in 1973 as the federal organization in charge of enforcing the controlled substances laws of the United States. Today thousands of DEA employees located in hundreds of offices across the country and around the world are dedicated to fulfilling DEA’s mission and to continuing our Tradition of Excellence.

We are experts in drug law enforcement: Special Agents, Diversion Investigators, Forensic Scientists, Intelligence Research Specialists and highly trained support staff and we work together as one team to keep Americans safe from dangerous drugs and those that traffic in them.


Narcan Saves Lives

Naloxone quickly reverses an overdose by blocking the effects of opioids. It can restore normal breathing within 2 to 3 minutes in a person whose breath has slowed, or even stopped, as a result of opioid overdose.
 
More than one dose of naloxone may be required when stronger opioids like fentanyl are involved.
 
Naloxone won’t harm someone if they’re overdosing on drugs other than opioids, so it’s always best to use it if you think someone is overdosing. If you give someone naloxone, stay with them until emergency help arrives or for at least four hours to make sure their breathing returns to normal.


One Pill Can Kill
Campaign

In 2023, DEA seized more than 78.4 million fentanyl-laced fake pills and nearly 12,000 pounds of fentanyl powder. The 2023 seizures are equivalent to more than 388.8 million lethal doses of fentanyl.

The 2024 fentanyl seizures represent over 11.2 million deadly doses. *


Song For Charlie

Song for Charlie is a national family-run nonprofit charity dedicated to raising awareness about ‘fentapills’ — fake pills made of fentanyl.

We partner with experts, educators, parents and other influencers to reach the most vulnerable group: young people between the ages 13-24.

Our program highlights the emerging dangers of self-medication and casual drug use in the fentanyl era and encourages healthier strategies for coping with stress.


End Overdose

THE PROBLEM:
According to data from the CDC, drug-related overdoses are the number one cause of death for people ages 18-45. Synthetic opioids, primarily fentanyl, causing 2/3rd of those deaths.

Experimental drug use and addiction puts young people as one of the most at-risk populations for overdoses.

Fentanyl is lethal in small amounts (2mg) and many times people are unaware their drugs contain fentanyl.

40% of overdose deaths could have been prevented if someone present knew how and when to intervene.

Oftentimes, there is a lack of education on and accessibility to these overdose prevention and response resources.


National Fentanyl Awareness Day

Raising awareness about an urgent national problem: people are dying at alarming rates due to illicit fentanyl, a dangerous synthetic opioid. Get the facts and share them widely.


National Fentanyl Prevention & Awareness Day

National Fentanyl Prevention and Awareness Day™ is established in remembrance of those lost to illicit fentanyl poisoning and to acknowledge the devastation this drug has brought to hundreds of thousands of affected family members and friends. This is a day of a coordinated response from fentanyl awareness organizations and affected families sharing their lived experiences as part of a whole group warning and informing our youth, the public, and the unsuspecting. The national day is observed on August 21st.

Learn about the Fentanyl facts to protect yourself and your family.


Operation Prevention

Discover • Connect • Prevent

The DEA has joined forces with Discovery Education to provide no-cost online tools that support every member of the community with the power of prevention. Help kickstart life-saving conversations today with standards-aligned English & Spanish-language resources for students in grades 3-12, plus additional resources designed for educators, families, and professionals.


Butterfly Counseling

Butterfly Counseling was founded in January of 2022 by April Sunshine Dupree, M.A., LMCHC. 

The name, Butterfly Counseling, was lovingly chosen in honor of her late mother, whom regularly visits April in the form of yellow butterflies.

Butterfly Counseling is conveniently located in Lillington, NC offering in-person services as well as teletherapy appointments. April started Butterfly Counseling as the solo-provider but quickly saw the need for additional providers. A year later, April is now joined by six other providers serving a variety of mental health counseling and coaching services to Harnett County and neighboring communities.


Recovery.org

Recovery is an American Addiction Center (AAC) resource that connects you with valuable information about addiction treatment, finding local drug and alcohol treatment centers, and support programs to help you begin the recovery journey.

https://healing-transitions.org
Healing Transitions
A Place for Recovery

We believe all people struggling with addiction (especially the homeless, uninsured, and underserved) deserve services on demand. That’s why we offer both a men’s campus and a women’s campus tailored to serve their unique needs.


Mental Health

MentalHealth.gov provides one-stop access to U.S. government mental health and mental health problems information. MentalHealth.gov aims to educate and guide:

- General Public
- Health and Emergency Preparedness Professionals
- Policy Makers
- Government and Business Leaders
- School Systems
- Local Communities


Fentanyl Victims Network

The Fentanyl Victims Network of North Carolina is an information clearinghouse with everything you need to know, do, and say when fentanyl kills your loved one in North Carolina and how to fight for justice.


Youth Villages

Youth Villages provides help for children and young people across the United States who face a wide range of emotional, mental and behavioral problems. We work to find solutions using proven treatment models that strengthen the child’s family and support systems and dramatically improve their long-term success.

Youth Villages directly helps tens of thousands of young people and their families every year and increases our impact through partnerships and advocacy.


Substance Abuse and  Mental Health Services Administration

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) is the agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that leads public health efforts to advance the behavioral health of the nation.


North Carolina Opioid Settlements

North Carolina will receive $1.5 billion from a series of national opioid settlements totaling $56 billion – funds that will help bring desperately needed relief to communities impacted by opioids.

These funds will be used to support treatment, recovery, harm reduction, and other life-saving programs and services in communities throughout the state. North Carolina’s Opioid and Substance Use Action Plan lays out concrete strategies to advance prevention, reduce harm, and connect people to the care that they need.


The Blue Plaid Society

The Blue Plaid Society is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization dedicated to raising awareness and educating the public about illicit fentanyl, the drug that is killing our children and loved ones by lethal poisoning at a catastrophic rate. This drug does not discriminate against any group of American society. Victims include the unknowing one-time experimenter, recreational users, and those trapped in substance use disorder. All souls lost to this epidemic are important and we stand together as bereaved survivors and supporters to alert the public of the existence and danger of contaminated illicit drugs pouring into America; to educate society of the potency and lethality of these drugs; to exploit how they are distributed through unmonitored borders, US mail, social media and the dark web; to explain why these deaths are poisonings, not overdoses, and should be charged as homicides; and to foster an environment that encourages education and support as it relates the stigma and lack of understanding of the disease of addiction.