Times Colonist

Team that has left drug lifestyle offers to help

- — Pedro Arrais

People with substance-use issues who are either experienci­ng or at risk of homelessne­ss will soon get support from peers who have moved out of the drug lifestyle, thanks to funding for the Peer Navigation and Support Project.

The pilot project, a partnershi­p between the Vancouver Island AIDS Society and Solid Outreach Society, is being funded by the Victoria Foundation.

While outreach services for those with an entrenched lifestyle are not new, this project differs because it only employs people who have themselves experience­d substance abuse and/or homelessne­ss.

The society’s outreach team is already on the street every morning and at night Monday to Friday, providing harm-reduction supplies and recovering discarded supplies.

Their daily outreach services mean they are familiar faces on the street, which helps build a level of confidence.

“We already have a level of street cred because the people on the street know we have been in their shoes,” said Jack Phillips, interim director of the society.

The aim of the Peer Navigation and Support Project is to provide clients with a range of supports, including accompanyi­ng individual­s to appointmen­ts, navigation of social and nonprofit services, advocacy and capacity-building.

“Sometimes, the reason they don’t take care of themselves is because they are scared of society,” said Phillips, who is also the society’s outreach director.

“To improve their quality of life, we teach them how to navigate the system and get the help they need. It can mean helping them find a place to stay or connecting them with various social services. The goal is to improve their health — up to them being able to go to work.”

Proof of the efficacy of the program will be greater individual self-determinat­ion, as well as improved health and well-being in participan­ts.

Drug users can obtain harm-reduction supplies, naloxone training and referrals for health and social services, as well as receive education on overdose prevention at the Solid Outreach Society’s office.

The society also hosts a Hepatitis C Women’s Group, an Indigenous Women’s Action Group and a Women’s Night on the last Monday of the month.

For more informatio­n, go to solidvicto­ria.org.

 ?? TIMES COLONIST ?? The Solid Outreach Society office offers the lifesaving overdose drug naloxone, as well as education on OD prevention.
TIMES COLONIST The Solid Outreach Society office offers the lifesaving overdose drug naloxone, as well as education on OD prevention.

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