Naloxone is part of harm-reduction strategies. (Photo by NEXT Distro, Unsplash) |
Washington County, ME (Wikipedia map) |
In 2022, MaineHealth "launched Project DHARMA – Distribution of Harm Reduction Access in Rural Maine Areas – a collaboration with community-based organizations, including syringe services programs. Washington County became a beneficiary," Sisk reports. Harm reduction care "embraces a set of evidence-based strategies for reducing the negative consequences of drug use to keep people alive and as healthy as possible until such time as they should be ready to seek treatment."
Kinna Thakarar is an infectious disease and addiction medicine physician for MaineHealth and Project DHARMA's lead researcher. She told Sisk, "The services Project DHARMA is funding are evidence-based. Among the supplies and services syringe services programs typically provide in addition to clean syringes are saline, Band-Aids, condoms, information, and referrals. . . . They provide naloxone, a medication that quickly reverses the effects of an opioid overdose, and offer fentanyl test strips, an increasingly urgent need."
"Another critical service this grant will fund is one advocates have fought hard to launch: drug testing using handheld spectrometers. Outreach workers will test drugs to determine their contents; the drugs will then be sent to Colby College for confirmation. Other academic partners are providing technical assistance," Sisk writes. "But gaining permission to do so wasn’t easy. It required passing legislation 'so that none of us would get arrested in doing this evidence-based public health work,' Thakarar said. The passage of L.D. 1745, signed into law this summer, allows select individuals to possess 'nominal amounts' of illicit or controlled substances for the purposes of drug testing."
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