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Drug overdose is the leading cause of accidental death in Rhode island, far outstripping auto accidents. To help alleviate this plague Jonathan Goyer trained AIDS Project RI staff on the use of Narcan, which is used to reverse the overdose effects of heroin and opioids.
Goyer is the executive director of Project Weber, a non-profit that works with male sex workers on health issues. He has used opioids himself, and overdosed in 2013. Narcan saved his life. Since then Goyer “has experienced long-term sobriety,” and works as a recovery specialist.
In the videos below Goyer describes the symptoms of opioid overdose, tells the story of his own battles with addiction, and describes how to administer Narcan to save a life.
If you encounter someone experiencing an overdose, said Goyer, “First, call 911.”
Narcan is available at any pharmacy. Most insurance plans cover Narcan with a low co-pay. Narcan is not a controlled substance, and has no effect on anyone not overdosing. Narcan is available as a third-party prescription, because no one ever administers Narcan to themselves. Narcan is for helping non-responsive people in the throes of an overdose.
If you have family or friends who are at risk, or work regularly with people who are at risk for heroin overdose, consider getting trained in the use of Narcan.
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The ads cover television, radio, billboards and the sides of buses. There is a website. The powerful ads feature eight local men and women who tell their stories of addiction and recovery. Though many share their personal stories of addiction, one woman, Elise, speaks from the point of view of a mother who lost two sons to overdose.
Holly Cekala, executive director of RICAREs (the group that staged a “Die-In” outside the State House earlier this week) pointed out the wide range of ages, races and economic level of those in recovery and told me that the community she serves, and is a part of, is the most diverse community there is. Addiction, it seems, does not discriminate.
Anchoring the event and introducing the speakers was Jim Gillen, Director of Recovery Services at the Providence Center / Anchor Community Center. Gillen has been in long term recovery since 1998 and As a result, my life is banging, let me tell you, he said to the audience, Its the reason that Im employable, its the reason that I pay taxes, that I drive with a license and insurance and I vote.
Dr. Michael Fine, director of HEALTH, said that the point of this campaign is to let every single Rhode islander know that addiction is a disease. This is a campaign to bring Rhode Islanders together.
There were 232 overdose deaths in Rhode Island last year. People have already died this year. With each death, says Dr. Fine, a piece of Rhode Island dies.
Dr. Fine revealed that another aspect of this campaign is designed to raise awareness among doctors and others with the power to prescribe opiates about their responsibility in curbing this epidemic, as well as bringing more accountability to the pharmacies that fill the prescriptions. We need to change our prescribing behavior, said Dr. Fine.
Linda Mahoney of BHDDH sees this campaign as a means of combating the stigma that addiction carries. She commended the eight people appearing in the ads for having the courage to face this stigma head on in an effort to change the hearts and minds of the wider community. It takes courage, said Mahoney, to come out professionally and publicly and say, I know I was sick. I got better and there is still work to do.
The idea is to overcome stigma, to treat addiction as a disease like any other disease, said Mahoney.
Jonathan, one of the eight featured in the ads, started with a joke, When I was told that this campaign would mean having my face plastered on the side of a bus, I said that this wouldnt be the first time I was plastered on a bus. But he soon turned serious. His was a story of addiction that lead to crime and estrangement from friends and family.
It ultimately led to his death, but he was saved by an injection of Narcan. Waking up in the hospital, Jonathan’s first thought was to score more drugs, but he learned that there were people out there who loved me more than I loved myself.
Jonathan has been in recovery for 19 months. He is repairing his relationship with his family, has a job and is paying the debts he accrued during his addiction. Still, addiction haunts him. On Wednesday he attended a funeral for a 22-year old friend, one of the first overdose deaths in 2015.
Elise spoke next. She is a nurse who has worked in recovery since 1998. Her son Paul died at the age of 22 in 2004, and her son Teddy died at age 30 in 2010. Who would have thought it would happen to me? Elise asked, You cant have your blinders on.
We cant arrest ourselves out of this problem, said Dr. Fine during the question and answer session, observing that addiction is a medical, not law enforcement problem. Jim Gillen, wrapping up the event, seemed to concur. We may have lost the war on drugs, he said, but we will win the war on addiction.
Below are all eight videos produced for the campaign.
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In 2014, there were at least 216 known deaths from accidental opiates overdose. Rhode Island is in the midst of an epidemic that has been somewhat mitigated by the availability of Narcan, an emergency medication that can keep someone overdosing on opiates alive long enough for them to get to a hospital. Those who have overdosed range in age from 15 to 65 and deaths have occurred in 30 different cities or towns in the state.
Opiate overdoses don’t discriminate.
RICARES, (Rhode Island Communities for Addiction Recovery Efforts) in an effort to push the General Assembly towards renewing the program that makes Narcan available, staged a “Die-In” outside the State House on the first day of the legislative session yesterday. The activists are also seeking to expand the “Good Samaritan” law so that a person on parole or probation who calls for medical assistance in the event of a friends overdose will not be at risk of going back to prison. Activists are also looking for more funding for addiction recovery programs.
I was fortunate to be able to talk to Janina LeVasseur, a board member at RICARES, about overdoses, Narcan and addiction recovery. All the research and reading I did ahead of this event did not come close to providing me with the insight and understanding I got in this short conversation.
More than 100 people who committed to this action by laying on the ground in the freezing cold and snow demonstrated determination and fortitude. Many were there in memory of a loved one lost to an overdose.
As LeVasseur said in our interview, this is a social justice issue, and one that should be easy for us all to get behind.
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