The Day

LIBRARY DIRECTOR PUTS NEWLY STOCKED NARCAN TO USE IN NORWICH

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Norwich — When Executive Director Robert Farwell stocked Otis Library with an overdose-reversal drug last month, he did so hoping he wouldn’t have to use it at all, let alone a few weeks later.

Yet late Monday afternoon, when Farwell learned a man had overdosed in a library bathroom, Farwell sprang into action.

“Frankly my reaction was, all right, I know where the Narcan is, I know this situation has arisen and I don’t have time for a great deal of considerat­ion about the facts involved,” he said. “In that moment, you act as your brother or sister’s keeper. That’s really the only considerat­ion.”

Farwell, who was trained on how to administer Narcan when he decided to bring it into the library, said the man responded to the drug and regained consciousn­ess.

Farwell said he wanted Narcan on hand because overdoses are an increasing­ly prevalent problem in the city. He worked with Norwich Human Services to make it happen.

With 32 fatal overdoses in 2017, Norwich by far led the southeaste­rn Connecticu­t region. Notably, one of those overdoses was blamed on carfentani­l, an opioid drug intended to tranquiliz­e large animals. It’s an estimated 100 times stronger than fentanyl, which already is up to 50 times stronger than heroin.

Having the antidote in the library could be especially

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