Nails, Hair, Hips, Heels鈥攁nd Harm Reduction
How the Butler Institute for Families is helping a first-of-its kind behavioral healthcare program for drag performers.
The Butler Institute for Families, a part of the 91桃色鈥檚 Graduate School of Social Work, is a lifeline for many Colorado organizations working to improve outcomes for community members, and its latest project鈥攁n innovative harm reduction program鈥攑asses the vibe check.
It鈥檚 called听. A part of听, 听the program aims to promote and offer safer solutions to sexual health, wellness and harm reduction through free programming, resources and testing. It launched in 2022 through a Substance Abuse Mental Health Services Administration grant (SAMHSA), 听
While MHBHC has clinical expertise, they don鈥檛 always have the capacity to conduct comprehensive evaluations of their programs.
That鈥檚 where听, senior research associate at the听, and her team step in. They can provide a broad range of services including evaluation, research and program support.
鈥淲hat we offer is a different way to look at the data,鈥 Silverstein says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e able to bring that longitudinal perspective as well as support in understanding and applying what we鈥檙e learning from the data.鈥 听
Since the programs at MHBHC are pushing the conventions of public health, there鈥檚 very little research available, making the Butler team鈥檚 support invaluable.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e a team of really bad ass people,鈥 says program manager Zack Jenio. 鈥淚 love working with the Butler team because they not only help bring in evidence from literature and the academic conversation but also help conduct research within our priority populations and local community to make informed decisions.鈥
For Bee the Vibe鈥檚 latest project, the Butler Institute developed training materials for a first- of-its-kind harm reduction education program for drag performers. Drag performances, which were first documented in the late 19th听century, are seen as a form of art and a platform for activism.
Jenio鈥檚 drag persona, Dr. Zackarina, exemplifies the powerful combination of drag and harm reduction education. When Dr. Zackarina puts on her wig and sashays onto center stage, people listen. Jenio calls it wig privilege.
鈥淵ou have this platform. You have people鈥檚 attention. What do you do with it?鈥 he says. 鈥淒rag is an effective tool. It鈥檚 fun, glamorous, campy and engaging. Fun is an incentive to get people engaged with different programming.鈥
The program is designed to educate drag artists in harm reduction principles and encourage them to integrate the messages into their performances. From explaining how to use Narcan鈥攖he drug overdose reversal drug鈥攖o explaining safer sex practices, trained artists will be able to empower other community members. And so far, it鈥檚 working. Butler鈥檚 diligence and care on the project has contributed to the promising results in pre-and post-knowledge tests.
鈥淚鈥檓 grateful for everything that they鈥檝e done,鈥 Jenio says. 鈥淭heir cultural competency with queer communities is very important. They鈥檝e just always been allies with a capital A, in a way that鈥檚 informed, compassionate.鈥
With the Butler Institute working to evaluate the program, Jenio and his team have more time to be out in the community. So far, Bee the Vibe has served hundreds of people through appointments, sexual health testing, in-person training, events and social media.
鈥淥ur community partners are out there saving lives every day,鈥 Silverstein says. 鈥淪upporting what they do is what drives us.鈥