Drink and Drugs News November 2016 | Page 14

HARM REDUCTION Reaching out Now that naloxone is officially ‘out there’, CGL are among those searching for the people most in need of it. DDN reports uy Phillips is preparing for his nightshift as an outreach worker in Newham, east London. In his rucksack he will carry needles, a first aid kit, condoms, information leaflets – and four naloxone kits, plus a training kit. His mission is to give naloxone to ‘anybody that needs it’ and to offer friendly advice and a route to further help. Phillips is employed by CGL but coordinates his shifts to do joint outreach with East London NHS Foundation Trust and homeless charity Thames Reach, to find the people in most need. ‘I’ll have my lists of people I want to see and they’ll have their list of people they want to see, so we’ll form a plan before we go out,’ he says. Shifts vary to try to cover all hours within a fortnightly period, and can be as early as 4am to 8am. Many of those they will be trying to reach will be rough sleepers ‘who might be walking around, about to bed down somewhere’; others will be tuned into the night-time economy – sex workers, who don’t keep hours that fit in with regular drug services. Some of the people they meet are glad of a friendly face and interested in hearing about naloxone – particularly if word has already reached them of this life-saving drug. Others are more difficult to engage – the sex workers for example, who may be earning £400 a night, can buy as much heroin as they want, don’t need methadone, and can’t see the need to talk to a drugs worker. Looking at those most at risk, ‘It’s difficult to say who’s most likely to overdose, but imagine the effects of rough sleeping on people, in terms of being out in the cold and not having the facilities we normally have, plus the likelihood of having a lowered immune system,’ says Phillips. So the night’s schedule focuses on rough sleepers. ‘I’ll ask them if they want to have naloxone, and if they say no, I’m going to have to persuade them it’s a good idea,’ he says. He might get the reply ‘I’m only smoking’, and will have to dig deeper to find out if they are taking anything else. ‘Most people who die of overdose die because they’ve used more than one substance – and each drug can multiply the effect of the other substance,’ he says. A brief chat will often reveal they are taking ‘all sorts of drugs at all sorts of times – methadone, buprenorphine, alcohol, anything that suppresses the central nervous system’. Then there’s ‘quite a bit of persuasion to do, because people think they don’t necessarily need naloxone, and I have to explain that they do’. When he’s got their attention, Phillips runs through what an overdose can look like and what can happen throughout the course of it. G 14 | drinkanddrugsnews | November 2016 www.drinkanddrugsnews.com