




The Cut
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@TheCut
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“Naloxone won’t fix addiction. But it interrupts death. It creates a pause where there wasn’t one before. And sometimes, that pause is enough to keep someone here.” In a new essay for The Cut, Paloma Elsesser writes about her experience with addiction, overdose, and loss, and why Naloxone — the lifesaving nasal spray that can reverse an opioid overdose in minutes — needs to be widely-accessible, better understood, and more frequently used. “We cannot afford to meet this reality with stigma or silence. Overdose is not rare, and it is not distant. It is happening in bedrooms, at parties, in apartments just like mine once.” Read on: the-cut.visitlink.me/K5bmKo



















