Opioid memorial to be brought to Roosevelt Field

The Island Now

Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas is partnering with The National Safety Council and other regional funders to bring the council’s opioid memorial to Roosevelt Field Mall in Garden City from Sept. 23 to 28.

Prescribed to Death: A Memorial to the Victims of the Opioid Crisis is free and open to the public from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily and will be situated in the north court inside the mall. The exhibit puts a face on the worst drug crisis in recorded United States history, personalizing an issue that has been declared a public health emergency.

Nassau County is the eighth stop on the memorial’s nationwide tour, and the third stop in New York – the only state to host it multiple times. Unveiled in Chicago in November 2017, the memorial previously visited Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Fayetteville, Ark., Houston, Buffalo, Albany and Washington, D.C., where it was displayed on the Ellipse in President’s Park at the White House.

 “The opioid epidemic has taken an incredible toll on Long Island families, and we are encouraged by a recent drop in overdoses,” Singas said. “As we work to turn the tide on the devastating scourge of opioid addiction, we are proud to partner with the National Safety Council and our generous sponsors to bring this moving and powerful campaign to Roosevelt Field Mall. I hope many of our neighbors will take time to visit, experience, and learn from this incredible memorial before it continues on its nationwide journey.”

 “The most heartbreaking aspect of the opioid crisis is the faces behind the numbers,” said Lorraine M. Martin, president and CEO of the National Safety Council. “The data can change policy, but the personal stories can change behaviors and culture. We are honored to return to New York and bring this powerful exhibit to Nassau County.”

The National Safety Council launched Prescribed to Death – a multifaceted exhibit aimed at changing Americans’ attitudes toward opioids – as a part of the Council’s Stop Everyday Killers public education campaign. The centerpiece of the exhibit is a wall of 22,000 engraved white pills – each representing the face of someone lost to a prescription opioid overdose in 2015 – the latest set of data available at the time of the exhibit’s launch. Since then, opioid overdose deaths have more than doubled.

New York State resident Avi Israel – who founded Save the Michaels of the World after losing his son, Michael – lent his son’s personal effects to the National Safety Council to display as part of the exhibit. Visitors enter a small remembrance room where Mr. Israel shares Michael’s story in a short video.  

 Advocate Sharon Richmond, a teacher from Northport in Suffolk County, lost her 25-year-old son E. Vincent D’Antoni in 2017 to a fentanyl-related overdose. Richmond will share her son’s personal story at the memorial’s unveiling on Sept. 23.

 The memorial is accompanied by resources that help visitors both safely dispose of unused pills in their homes and facilitate discussions with prescribers about alternatives. Visitors receive first-of-their-kind “Opioids: Warn Me” labels to affix to their insurance cards, empowering them to discuss with prescribers the risks of taking opioids and whether other pain relief options are available.

The council has partnered with Stericycle – a Chicago-based waste disposal company – to provide Seal&Send medication disposal envelopes to help visitors easily get rid of unused medications.

 Individuals who have lost someone to opioid overdose have the opportunity to add their loved one’s name to a digital memorial on site. Those who are unable to visit the exhibit can share their loved one’s story and a photo by using the Council’s interactive online map, Celebrating Lost Loved Ones.

 The exhibit is underwritten by contributions from RXR Realty, Northwell Health, Mets Foundation, Save the Michaels of the World, Eric and Marc Blumencranz, Stericycle and Schneider National. Visit stopeverydaykillers.org for more information.

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