Educational Workshops

Helping Teens Understand the Science and Struggles of Addiction

Tom Bott and Sherry Jo Matt founded Stop The Judgment Project (STJP) in honor of their daughter, Siena, who tragically died in September 2020 at the age of 21 from fentanyl poisoning. Siena battled mental health disorders throughout her middle and high school years and turned to drugs and alcohol to cope with her illness. STJP’s mission is bringing awareness to the stigma and judgment associated with mental health disorders and substance use disorders in adolescents and young adults.

Last school year, in partnership with the Allegheny Health Network (AHN) Chill Project™ and with the financial support of The PNC Charitable Trust, STJP launched its educational workshop initiative at high schools and middle schools and spoke with over 1500 students across 4 school districts in the Pittsburgh area (Clairton, New Kensington, Parkway West CTC and Northgate). STJP has continued its momentum into this new school year, having spoken with an additional 2500 students across 3 additional school districts (Cornell, Trinity and Bentworth).

STJP’s workshops are conducted by its co-founder, Tom Bott, in collaboration with Dr. C. Thomas Brophy, Medical Director of the Ellen O’Brien Gaiser Center in Butler, PA and a physician board certified in both emergency medicine and addiction medicine and an expert on the neuroscience of addiction.

STJP’s educational workshops provide first hand storytelling from two valuable perspectives. First, students hear from the emotional perspective of a grieving father (Tom Bott). Tom candidly discusses everything from his daughter’s struggles with mental health and substance use disorders throughout middle school and high school to a thoughtful discussion of what his family wonders they could have done differently to help Siena. After Tom's presentation, Dr Brophy presents a straightforward and in depth discussion of the neuroscience of addiction and the effects that drugs and alcohol have on the brain. STJP’s hope is that students are able to connect in different ways with the subject matter, according to their own needs and experiences with substance use and mental health disorders, which will better allow them to communicate with their friends, families, teachers and other students. Students are given a post-presentation survey to allow them to share ways in which the workshop has personally affected them and to allow STJP to collect outcome data from the students in an effort to improve their workshops.

Pilot Year Impact

7

School District Presentations

The pilot phase of our Educational Workshop has engaged students in seven school districts across Allegheny, Westmoreland and Washington Counties.
4.5K

Total Students Reached

Over 4,500 students have taken part in our workshops to learn about the complexities of substance use and mental health disorders and how the two diseases are often linked.
95%

Students Would Recommend

95% of students who participated in our Educational Workshops said they would recommend them to their peers.

Top 3 Things Students Found Most Interesting About our Educational Workshops

Personal
Testimony

26%

Neuroscience of Addiction

23%

Mental Health & Stigma

8%
(N=280)

National Trends*: Why We Do This

10.1%

Suicide Prevention

In 2024, 10.1% of youth ages 12-17 had serious thoughts of suicide, 4.6% made a suicide plan, and 2.7% attempted suicide.
15.1%

Educating Early

In 2024, more than 1 in 10 (15.1%) youth ages 12-17 reported abusing an illicit drug.
16.8%

Driving Awareness

In 2024, 16.8% of people 12 and older had a substance use disorder in the past year.
85%

Creating Open Lines of Communication

Most youth (85%) report that they do not get care because they feel they should be able to handle their issues on their own**
* SAMHSA, Key Substance Use and Mental Health Indicators in the United States: Results from the 2024 National Survey on Drug Use and Health.
** The Annie E. Casey Foundation, Youth Mental Health Statistics in 2024, www.aecf.org
Open quotation marks in Stop The Judgment brand purple
The message is powerful and needed and I appreciate the awareness being spread, coming from someone who has addicts very close to them.
Student Participant

Our Inspiration: Siena

Image

Siena “Sadie” Bott was a beautiful person inside and out. She was taken from this world at a mere 21 years of age when she died of fentanyl poisoning in 2020.

Siena’s huge heart and kindness toward others meant she was always willing to help out a friend in need.

She wanted to avoid the stigma and shame our society puts on people who are living with addiction.

Her Story
Image from an Educational Workshop hosted by Stop The Judgment Project

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Please consider making a donation to Stop the Judgment Project. Your contributions will help us on our mission of bringing awareness to the stigma and judgment associated with mental health disorders and substance use disorders in adolescents and young adults
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