Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Donate your vehicle during the month of April or May and you'll be entered into a $500 Visa gift card drawing!

Inside the Network of Heroin Users Fighting Overdose Deaths in Hartford

Sherwood Taylor sits on his bed. He reversed an overdose in his apartment using naloxone he got from Mark Jenkins of the Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition.
Ryan Caron King
/
WNPR
Sherwood Taylor sits on his bed. He reversed an overdose in his apartment using naloxone he got from Mark Jenkins of the Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition.

Sherwood Taylor, now in recovery, has been using heroin for over 50 years.
Credit Ryan Caron King / WNPR
/
WNPR
Sherwood Taylor, now in recovery, has been using heroin for over 50 years.

Sherwood Taylor remembered the time he saw a friend die of an overdose, just feet away from where he sat on his bed in his Hartford apartment.

“Matter of fact, that chair right there, he fell out of it. Boom," Taylor said. "I said: Mike! I don’t hear him breathing no more. So I get up, I snap. So I call 911, said a guy OD’d here. And they did work on him. But he died. They carried him out of here in a body bag.” 

At the age of 75, Taylor defies statistics. He’s been using heroin for more than 50 years. The average drug user will die 15 to 20 years after they start using. So Taylor’s seen his fair share of overdoses -- and he’s seen a change in the way heroin users try to stop ODs. 

A few years later, another of his friends was overdosing, and this time, Taylor had naloxone, a drug that's designed to reverse an overdose. “So I shoot him up and a half hour or whatever, he’s like thanks Wood, you saved old boy. But I saved one, and one died," Taylor said. 

Taylor, who's now in recovery, got thenaloxonefrom the Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition, an organization of volunteers trying to get overdose prevention kits into the hands of heroin users.

"I’d rather engage users themselves because they’re more at risk," said Mark Jenkins, founder of the coalition. 

Naloxone has been used for decades in emergency rooms and ambulances, but advocates like Jenkins say that the best way to prevent overdose deaths is to getnaloxone directlyinto the hands of heroin users, whoare the most likely to be at the scene of an overdose. Jenkins, who offers naloxone training sessions free to the public, said social services staff often have access tonaloxonetraining, but that doesn’t help the user who’s shooting up at home -- or, in restaurant bathroom.  

Naloxone kits being assembled by Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition volunteers.
Credit Ryan Caron King / WNPR
/
WNPR
Naloxone kits being assembled by Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition volunteers.
Jenkins exchanges clean syringes for used ones with a Hartford resident. Normally, Jenkins would pick them up, but his van was being repaired.
Credit Ryan Caron King / WNPR
/
WNPR
Jenkins exchanges clean syringes for used ones with a Hartford resident. Normally, Jenkins would pick them up, but his van was being repaired.

“I’m not worried about training staff. Nothing against, it’s good information, they need it," Jenkins said. "But the information dies along with the medication on the shelf when you’re giving medication to staff. I’d rather train at a McDonalds or Dunkin Donuts. Those are public consumption spaces." 

New Connecticut laws make it easier to get naloxone from a doctor or a pharmacist. But Jenkins said that drug users -- dug to stigma and social isolation -- often don’t make it there.Jenkins himself struggled with heroin addiction. He’s been clean for almost 20 years. Now, his phone doesn’t stop ringing with requests fornaloxonetraining. His ringtone -- appropriately  -- is a blaring emergency alarm. He tells the people he givesnaloxoneto that they should pass it on to other heroin users they know. And to come back to him for more if they run out. 

A volunteer assembles naloxone kits that Jenkins will distribute later that night during a training session.
Credit Ryan Caron King / WNPR
/
WNPR
A volunteer assembles naloxone kits that Jenkins will distribute later that night during a training session.

But the coalition's supply of naloxone is running low. The Connecticut Department of Public Healthpilot program it's a part of is coming to an end, and now, Jenkins is pulling from a donation of naloxone kits he received from a pharmaceutical company. Often, Jenkins funds the organization out of his own pockets.

Marianne Buchelli oversees the state’s community naloxone distribution pilot program. She said that demand has exceeded the state’s supplies.

"We continue to get calls from law enforcement," Buchelli said. "I just received a call from an emergency room out in the Danbury area -- other community providers. Friends and family members affected by prescription and injection drug uses." 

Buchelli said she’s working to get funding for programs like Mark’s on the agenda for next year’s legislative session.

Massachusettsand Rhode Island have had community-basednaloxonedistribution for nearly a decade. But Jenkins said Connecticut has been slow on the draw.

“If this were anything else -- I mean, look at Ebola. How they sprang to action," Jenkins said. "Look now atZika, and how they spring to action -- and an open wallet. But still isn’t the case with addiction.”

Mark Jenkins drives through Hartford's North End. He distributes clean syringes and keeps tabs on heroin users who might need a connection to social services.
Credit Ryan Caron King / WNPR
/
WNPR
Mark Jenkins drives through Hartford's North End. He distributes clean syringes and keeps tabs on heroin users who might need a connection to social services.

Jenkins drove his van through Hartford’s North End. He knows this is where he’ll find people who need clean syringes,naloxone, and sometimes, a ride to the hospital.

He saw a familiar face at a corner -- a heroin user he’s worked with over the years. He pulled to the side, rolled down the window, and asked him how he was doing.

"Just trying to survive," the man responded. 

Correction: An earlier version of this story reported that Sherwood Taylor was 76. He was 75.

This story was produced for the New England News Collaborative. 

Copyright 2016 Connecticut Public

Ryan Caron King is a freelance multimedia reporter atWNPR. As an intern, he created short web videos to accompany some ofWNPR'sreporting online. As a student at the University of Connecticut, he managedUConn'scollege radio stationWHUS, where he headed an initiative to launch a recording and video production studio. Ryan graduated fromUConnwith a Journalism/English double major in 2015.

You make NHPR possible.

NHPR is nonprofit and independent. We rely on readers like you to support the local, national, and international coverage on this website. Your support makes this news available to everyone.

Give today. A monthly donation of $5 makes a real difference.