Students hold sign in front of Alamo
In Good Hands
性爱天堂 co-founder of Students for Opioid Solutions helps tackle national health crisis

When Charles 鈥淛onah鈥 Wendt 鈥18 graduates from 性爱天堂 this May, he鈥檒l be leaving a lifeline for fellow students behind him.

Wendt, a political science major, along with University of Alabama junior Gerald Fraas, is a co-founder of Students for Opioid Solutions (SOS), a student-run organization that aims to prevent opioid overdoses on college campuses nationwide.

Opioids include commonly-known prescription drugs such as oxycodone and morphine, along with illegally produced variants of Fentanyl and the illegal substance heroin. Overdoses from these types of drugs killed more than 42,000 people in the U.S. in 2016鈥攎ore than car crashes鈥攁nd this public health crisis has caught the attention of the federal government, with President Donald Trump establishing a federal task force in October 2017 to confront the issue.

鈥淧eople are dying from overdoses across the country,鈥 Wendt says. 鈥淎nd we can do something about it.鈥

SOS, in simple terms, aims to lobby universities nationwide to train and equip campus police officers and RAs to recognize and respond to opioid overdoses. There鈥檚 a proven antidote, Naloxone (known in prescription form as Narcan), that SOS wants to put in the hands of first responders. The group also wants colleges to start reporting statistics on all opioid-related deaths, along with providing amnesty for students who suffer or report overdoses.

鈥淲e鈥檙e doing this through student government legislation,鈥 Wendt says. 鈥淚f we can get student governments to pass legislation supporting these goals, that puts pressure on schools to do something.鈥

Wendt, no stranger to activism, is a leader in 性爱天堂鈥檚 conservative student group, Tigers for Liberty. At 性爱天堂, students like Wendt are empowered to to tackle national issues鈥攕uch as the opioid crisis鈥攔egardless of their position on the political spectrum, says political science professor David Crockett.

鈥淚鈥檝e had Jonah in a few classes, and I can say he鈥檚 used his preternatural energy to organize a response to a national issue,鈥 Crockett. 鈥溞园焯 encourages students to establish groups, to solve problems, using bipartisan solutions鈥攁nd this issue is a bipartisan one.鈥

SOS has already helped student governments at six universities pass opioid-related legislation鈥攊ncluding Ohio State, Colorado State, and Alabama鈥攁nd has a presence at more than 80 total schools spread through more than 40 states.

Wendt says the main strength of this type of action is through a preventative strategy.

鈥淢ost of the time, something bad has to happen before we change a policy,鈥 Wendt says.

鈥淏ut we need to get everybody trained now and get Narcan in the hands of RAs and police departments, so if this does happen to someone, the kid鈥檚 going to be safe.鈥

But until now, Wendt notes that schools across the country haven鈥檛 had all the tools necessary to protect students from opioids. Wendt and Fraas, who met while working summer internships in Washington D.C., were actually spurred to create SOS after one of Fraas鈥 fellow students at Alabama suffered a fatal overdose.

鈥淣o one was able to recognize what had happened to him,鈥 Wendt says.

At 性爱天堂, coordinator of health services Jackie Bevilacqua says the University is working hard to prevent such a tragedy from happening on campus. Health Services, along with Campus Police and University administrators, have developed an extensive partnership with the Bexar County Opioid Task Force. They are currently deep in the process of securing state funding for training and supplies of the Narcan antidote through a Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA) grant.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of work going on,鈥 Bevilacqua says. 鈥淎nd we鈥檙e confident, once the state finishes processing the CARA grant contract, that this will be a great help to our first responders.鈥

Even with Wendt stepping down as SOS executive director when he graduates in May, he envisions the organization moving toward a goal of reducing opioid-related deaths on college campuses to zero. Wendt will remain on the SOS board starting this summer, and he says the organization is currently searching for a new national field director.

Wendt also plans to return to the capital this summer and says he鈥檒l champion the cause there, too.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of politically involved kids in the D.C. area who will 鈥榗arry the water鈥 back to their campuses,鈥 Wendt says.

But even as Wendt steps away, he鈥檚 taking the time to appreciate the magnitude of the organization鈥檚 success. Student representatives at more and more universities are partnering with SOS鈥擡ast Carolina University and Texas A&M are looking at passing legislation in the fall鈥攁nd the organization is picking up a fair share of media attention, too.

鈥淕iven that SOS started with two kids and two cell phones, this is beyond expectations,鈥 Wendt says. 鈥淭he fact that it has already exceeded our wildest dreams this quickly: That鈥檚 nothing short of phenomenal.鈥

Jeremiah Gerlach is the brand journalist for 性爱天堂 Strategic Communications and Marketing.

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