Pubdate: Sat, 05 Jul 2014 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2014 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/letters Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Randy Richmond Page: A5 OVERDOSE KITS GIVEN TO ADDICTS Drug addicts in London have begun getting overdose kits and training that could save their lives. A coalition of agencies began handing out personal injection kits and prescribing anti-overdose drug Naloxone Friday, the latest weapon in a battle against London's high overdose rate. "We are all ready to roll out," said Sonja Burke, director of Counterpoint harm reduction services at Regional HIV/AIDS Connection. The challenge is to get as many users as possible to sign up for the kits and half-hour training session, and ensure their peers and families can help, health officials said Friday. "This is where things get a little tricky," Burke said. Naloxone can only be prescribed to an eligible drug user. But if that person goes into an overdose, they won't be able to help themselves. That means the drug users trained and supplied with Naloxone will have to ensure their friends and family know what to do, and give them permission to help, Burke said. The Middlesex-London health unit began handing out the kits and training users Friday. The health unit, the HIV/AIDS agency and the London Intercommunity Health Centre are working together to supply the kits. Each agency will hand them out on different days of the week, but the HIV/AIDS agency will provide the main phone to call - (519-434-1601) for people seeking information, Burke said. Outreach workers and agencies have known for years that London has a high rate of injection drug users. Last year alone, 41 people died of drug overdoses, a death rate double the Ontario average. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt