Welcome: Stigma-Free Organisations

Welcome to this learning journey on reducing professional and structural substance‑use stigma in organisations. This programme is designed for people who commission, design, manage, or deliver services used by adults (18+) with lived or living experience of substance use — including treatment, health, housing, social care, employment, criminal justice and peer‑led support.

What this learning is for

Stigma doesn’t just hurt feelings — it shapes whether people feel safe to seek help, how they’re treated when they do, and whether systems respond fairly. In organisational settings, stigma can show up in everyday interactions, in routine language, and in policies that unintentionally exclude or punish. This learning focuses on the kinds of stigma organisations can directly influence:

  • Professional stigma: negative attitudes, behaviours, and practices that lead to poorer care or unfair treatment.

  • Structural stigma: policies, procedures, norms or rules that limit rights and opportunities for people using services.

What you’ll learn

You’ll be guided through evidence‑based approaches that organisations can use to reduce stigma. You’ll also learn a practical, step‑by‑step method to develop and implement an anti‑stigma initiative — including how to co‑produce work with people with lived and living experience, how to plan activities, and how to evaluate and sustain improvements.

What this learning does not do

This is not an “off‑the‑shelf” set of interventions. What works in one setting may not work the same way in another. How you personal adapt approaches to your own setting really matters.

It also does not focus on public stigma or building media campaigns. Our emphasis here is on professional and organisational areas.

How to use these pages

Each page includes:

  • Key ideas (what matters most)

  • Practical actions (what you can do)

  • A short reflection (to apply it locally)

Quick reflection

What is one way your service currently makes it easier — or harder — for people to feel respected and included?