Amy Beaudoin, a former addict, showing the tattoo she calls her ‘‘testimony.’’ New Hampshire, where Amy lives, has the second-highest rate of drug overdoses in the U.S. Eric Adams, who lives in Laconia (population 16,000), has been assigned one task: to stop them. In September 2014, Eric became the first person in New England — to his knowledge, the only person in the country — whose job title is prevention, enforcement and treatment coordinator. His business cards read: ‘‘The Laconia Police Department recognizes that substance misuse is a disease. We understand you can’t fight this alone.’’ Eric answers his phone any time it rings, 7 days a week. Strangers call him at 3 a.m., and he speaks with them for hours. If an addict agrees to his help, Eric drives him to a treatment facility, sits beside him in waiting rooms and ferries his parents or siblings to visit him. In the nearly 3 years since Eric took on this role, as overdose rates have climbed across New Hampshire, those in Laconia have fallen. Of the 204 addicts Eric has crossed paths with, 123 of them have agreed to keep in touch with him. Eric calls them at least weekly. 92 have entered clinical treatment. 84, or just over 40% of all those he has met, are in recovery, having kept sober for 2 months or longer. And 0 have died. @nataliekeyssar took this photo of Amy, who now works closely with Eric as a volunteer recovery coach, while on assignment for @nytmag. Visit the link in our profile to read more.

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ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月13日 02時59分


Amy Beaudoin, a former addict, showing the tattoo she calls her ‘‘testimony.’’ New Hampshire, where Amy lives, has the second-highest rate of drug overdoses in the U.S. Eric Adams, who lives in Laconia (population 16,000), has been assigned one task: to stop them. In September 2014, Eric became the first person in New England — to his knowledge, the only person in the country — whose job title is prevention, enforcement and treatment coordinator. His business cards read: ‘‘The Laconia Police Department recognizes that substance misuse is a disease. We understand you can’t fight this alone.’’ Eric answers his phone any time it rings, 7 days a week. Strangers call him at 3 a.m., and he speaks with them for hours. If an addict agrees to his help, Eric drives him to a treatment facility, sits beside him in waiting rooms and ferries his parents or siblings to visit him. In the nearly 3 years since Eric took on this role, as overdose rates have climbed across New Hampshire, those in Laconia have fallen. Of the 204 addicts Eric has crossed paths with, 123 of them have agreed to keep in touch with him. Eric calls them at least weekly. 92 have entered clinical treatment. 84, or just over 40% of all those he has met, are in recovery, having kept sober for 2 months or longer. And 0 have died. @nataliekeyssar took this photo of Amy, who now works closely with Eric as a volunteer recovery coach, while on assignment for @nytmag. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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