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Lakewood Introduces a New Program to Aid in Opioid Addiction Recovery

Cincinnati Police say the new cocktail, labeled "Gray Death", is seven times more potent than morphine and is gray in appearance.
ShutterShock
/
STATEHOUSE NEWS BUREAU
Cincinnati Police say the new cocktail, labeled "Gray Death", is seven times more potent than morphine and is gray in appearance.
Cincinnati Police say the new cocktail, labeled "Gray Death", is seven times more potent than morphine and is gray in appearance.
Credit ShutterShock / STATEHOUSE NEWS BUREAU
/
STATEHOUSE NEWS BUREAU
In 2016, Lakewood recorded 141 overdoses and 31 deaths.

The city of Lakewood is trying a new approach to fight the opioid epidemic.

Project SOAR (Supporting Opiate Addiction Recovery) will use peers with experience in addiction recovery to contact local residents who’ve overdosed, and suggest options for recovery. The city is also working towards expanding resources at rehabilitation facilities to get those residents immediate help.

Lakewood mayor Mike Summers says the program will give drug users a second chance.

“This past week, we had three overdoes (and) saved all three. Now 'save them?' That means save them from what? Our experience is that most of these folks will continue to be users. So at what moment in time are they going to have a realization that they need to make a significant change? And that’s the moment we’re desperately trying to capture.”

Summers says the city has applied for $300,000 in federal funding to support the program. Last year, the city recorded 141 overdoses and 31 deaths. That's nearly triple the number in 2015.

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit WKSU.

Mitch Felan is a news intern for WKSU. He is a multimedia journalist with experience in print, television, radio and visual journalism. Felan is a junior at Kent State University, working towards a Bachelor's Degree in Multimedia Journalism. During the school year, Felan works for Kent State Student Media in TV2, The Kent Stater, and KentWired. He will be serving as the Digital Director for Kent State University's Student Media Newsroom in the Fall.