New York Post

GIZMO TO AID DOPERS

City critics balk

- By CARL CAMPANILE

Mayor Adams’ administra­tion is planning to install “life alert” devices in apartments to help drug users avoid dying from an overdose — in another taxpayer-funded reform that critics say encourages substance abuse.

The city Health Department intends to award a contract for a pilot program targeting residents considered a “high risk” to overdose, officials told The Post.

The controvers­ial contract will go to Lifeguard Digital Health, Inc., which manufactur­es a device called Lifeguard Lite

— a wall-mounted physical timer that can be activated by residents for self-monitoring of drug use.

Before injecting drugs, a resident who is alone can set the timer for up to six minutes. After it goes off, residents have the option to either extend the timer by one minute at a time, or hit the “I’m OK” button to disable it.

If the drug user doesn’t respond, Lifeguard Lite sounds a loud alarm and sends an alert to building staff to check on the resident.

If no one turns off the alarm after checking, the device calls 911, so city medics can respond to a potential overdose and administer naloxone.

The device also monitors room temperatur­e.

Conservati­ve Party chairman Gerard Kassar said city health officials should be helping addicts kick the habit rather than condoning or enabling drug use. “Can you imagine Alcoholics Anonymous coming up with a program that allowed you to drink booze?” Kassar said. “This is using taxpayer resources to allow drug use. It’s a continuati­on of drug injection sites.” But Health Department officials said Lifeguard Lite will be used on a trial basis with drug users at high risk for a fatal overdose — an experiment worth trying because OD deaths have surged more than 75% since 2019, largest because of abuse of potent fentanyl.

‘Innovative tools’

“Our focus at the Department of Health is to save lives. The Administra­tion has committed to exploring innovative tools — like this pilot program — to reduce the number of overdose deaths in New York City by 25%by 2030,” an agency spokesman said.

The city has two overdose prevention centers in East Harlem and Washington Heights where addicts can bring their own drugs and use clean needles to shoot up under medics’ watch.

The controvers­ial program has been credited with preventing more than 1,000 overdoses and the mayor backs its expansion.

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