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Wisconsin launches Narcan vending machines to reduce overdoses

If you go to a vending machine, its usually to get snacks or a drink. But these days you can get life-saving supplies like Narcan at public places like health centers, libraries and even a police department in a Milwaukee suburb.

Enter the Greenfield, Wisconsin, Police Department, and just a few steps to the right in the foyer is a vending machine.

"Right now we have Narcan, we have Deterra bags," says Lindsay Fuss who is the public health specialist in Greenfield. "Deterra bags are a type of harm reduction, where you can put pills, patches or liquids in there, you mix it with water and it deactivates those medications."

Fuss says there is a no-questions-asked approach when people use the machine.

"At the end of the day, these are here to save lives, these are here to support individuals. We are not here to judge or anything of that nature," says Fuss.

It was just a few months ago that Milwaukee County officials gathered to unveil the city’s first harm reduction vending machine.

Eddie Morales
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WUWM
County Executive David Crowley signing the bill to invest $11M to combat epidemic and create free Narcan vending machines.

Milwaukee County will spend $11 million in all on projects to reduce drug overdosing. That includes the purchase of 25 vending machines that provide free nasal Narcan, fentanyl test strips and more.

It’s all part of the effort to beat back a rising number of overdose deaths in the country.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says there were more than 80,000 opioid-related deaths in the U.S. in 2021. In Wisconsin there were more than 1,400 that year.

At the police station in Greenfield over 180 boxes of Narcan and more than 1,000 fentanyl test strips have been dispensed so far.

Eddie Morales
/
WUWM

"If I think back to when I was actively using, I would be very hesitant to think maybe somebody was tracking my use of these machines," says China Darrington the director of advocacy and public policy at Thrive Peer Recovery Services in Ohio. Darrington is also in long-term recovery.

She says reducing deaths requires a public health approach, even if people might be cautious about visiting a police station for resources.

"So, the fact that they're being utilized, and then once people use them, and they realize they're safe to use, they easily come back and word spreads amongst that community," says Darrington. "The next step is maybe you'll be comfortable enough to actually talk with the human about what your options are at that point too."

Darrington says it’s important to treat people with dignity and respect by providing them a safe place to retrieve life-saving supplies.

That’s why Greenfield chose a police department as its pilot location for the machine. It’s an effort to decrease the stigma of getting help and providing one of the safest spaces for people to go.

Eddie is a WUWM news reporter.
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