The State of Black America’s Drug Overdose Epidemic

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We call them addicts. Users. Drug seekers — and we see them as less than human.  

We often assume unhoused people living in tents under freeway overpasses are substance users. But it’s our neighbors, our loved ones, and our family. The reality is that most Americans know someone who struggles with substance use. And for Black America, there’s a drug overdose epidemic. 

“We have historically criminalized substance use in Black and Brown communities — the view has been very harsh. It’s almost as if it’s a throwaway population,” says Saeeda Dunston, CEO of Elmcor Youth & Adult Activities, a Queens, New York-based nonprofit service agency focused on substance use, prevention, and recovery.

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Elmcor offers a 51-bed facility for adult men and women with chronic substance use disorders. Residents are assessed for person-centered,
Elmcor operates the first and only Youth Recovery Club House in Queens funded by Office of Addiction Services and Support
In February 2024, Elmcor launched its Housing Services program with the opening of the Helen M. Marshall Manor, a state-of-the-art,
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