Giving Compass' Take:
- Surveys from unhoused individuals in Boston who have experienced opioid addiction share thoughts on effective treatment plans.
- How can this research help inform medical practices with substance abuse? What can donors do to support evidence-based research that considers lived experience?
- Read about decreasing substance abuse stigma in rural areas.
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Interviews with unhoused people who have recently experienced opioid overdose indicate more effective ways to deal with places like the “Mass and Cass” intersection in Boston, say researchers.
Massachusetts Avenue at Melnea Cass Boulevard in Boston is a noisy stretch of urban concrete—wide, traffic-clogged roads competing for space with businesses, parking lots, emergency shelters, health clinics, and a smattering of trees—that’s become a magnet for people who are unhoused and grappling with an opioid addiction.
Until the city moves them along, many of the hundreds of people who are drawn to the area sleep in tents and ramshackle shelters. In a recent story, the Boston Globe called the intersection a “notorious open-air illicit drug market.”
Boston has made multiple efforts over the years to address the complex problems that have gripped Mass and Cass. It’s started helplines to report discarded needles, removed tents, arrested people on the streets, diverted folks to shelter and treatment facilities, built a day center, and boosted investment in affordable housing. But the people and tents always seem to return.
It’s a familiar story across the country. Los Angeles, New York, and Philadelphia have all seen opioid overdose deaths rise in recent years, particularly among people experiencing homelessness. In Massachusetts, the crisis has taken a grim toll. There were more than 2,300 opioid overdose deaths in the state in 2022 and 500 between January and March of this year alone, according to the state’s Department of Public Health.
In an effort to find new ways of reducing the number of deaths, Boston University researchers spoke with opioid overdose survivors experiencing unsheltered homelessness in the streets around Mass and Cass. Those they interviewed talked about a series of common issues, including inadequate housing and shelter options and a chaotic and dangerous environment that stymied their recovery goals. The 29 interviewees—who had all overdosed within the past three months—also had ideas for improving available services.
Read the full article about homelessness and substance abuse by Andrew Thurston at Futurity.