The Potential Community Effects of the New Providence Overdose Prevention Center

Facilities that allow clients to use drugs under medical supervision have been open in Canada, Europe and Australia for years

A room in which clients can use drugs while under observation at OnPoint NYC, an Overdose Prevention Center in New York City.
A room in which clients can use drugs while under observation at OnPoint NYC, an Overdose Prevention Center in New York City.
Share
A room in which clients can use drugs while under observation at OnPoint NYC, an Overdose Prevention Center in New York City.
A room in which clients can use drugs while under observation at OnPoint NYC, an Overdose Prevention Center in New York City.
The Potential Community Effects of the New Providence Overdose Prevention Center
Copy

In an effort to reduce fatal drug overdoses, Providence nonprofit Project Weber/RENEW cut the ribbon on Tuesday to a new facility at which people will be able to use drugs under medical supervision.

When it opens to clients, the “Overdose Prevention Center,” or OPC, will be the first in the U.S. to be approved under regulations created by state law. OPCs currently exist in the U.S. in a gray area of federal law: not explicitly banned but not clearly condoned.

New York City opened the nation’s first two government-supported facilities in 2021, though federal prosecutors have threatened to shut them down and it’s unclear how the incoming Trump Administration will treat these facilities. Vermont plans to open a pilot OPC in Burlington after lawmakers passed enabling legislation earlier this year.

However, similar facilities have been open in Europe, Canada and Australia for years.

Brandon Marshall, professor of Epidemiology at the Brown University School of Public Health, has studied OPCs and is currently helping to lead a study funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health on the OPCs in New York and Rhode Island.

The Public’s Radio host Luis Hernandez spoke with Marshall to learn more about what the research says about the effectiveness of OPCs.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire interview here.

Republican John Loughlin says he would reshape the office into a taxpayer oversight and accountability agency similar to a state inspector general
Federal cuts to Medicaid and food assistance complicate an otherwise encouraging revenue picture
Jewish advocacy leaders say the numbers are improving, but incidents remain higher than before the Oct. 7 attacks and the Gaza war
A Greek restaurant hiding inside a jazz club, a reimagined oyster bar and a group of diners with matching notebooks: meet the people keeping local restaurants buzzing
The Blazejewski era begins in the Rhode Island House
The complaint, filed while Shekarchi was still giving his farewell speech, says ethics code bars elected officials from seeking state employment for one year after leaving office; Ethics Commission expected to take up the matter June 2