Texas bans many proven tools for helping drug users. Advocates are handing them out anyway.

Dambra places life-saving supplies and instructions in a “rescue kit.” The kits contain pamphlets, fentanyl test strips, canvas pouches, syringes, breathing masks, gloves and the overdose reversal medication naloxone in two forms — intramuscular and nasal spray.

Credit:
Annie Mulligan for The Texas Tribune

A way to help

Dambra writes a note before to place in a package of life-saving harm reduction supplies for a woman who reached out to her for help over Instagram.

Credit:
Annie Mulligan for The Texas Tribune

Halos are drawn on photos over the friends Dambra has lost. “People are dying at an outrageous rate because the fact is, everything is contaminated,” she says.

Credit:
Annie Mulligan for The Texas Tribune

Dambra shows supplies for intramuscular naloxone, commonly known as Narcan. Naloxone is an overdose prevention medication and one of the only harm reduction tools that Texas has embraced in recent years.

Credit:
Annie Mulligan for The Texas Tribune

An overdose crisis

A photo of Cassandra Saldivar hangs in living room of her mother, Patricia Hammad, as Hammad talks to her grandson Ace at their home in Arlington on Aug. 31. Saldivar died at the age of 22 from taking anti-anxiety medication laced with deadly fentanyl.

Credit:
Shelby Tauber for The Texas Tribune

Photos of Saldivar hang in the living room of her mother’s home. The 22-year old loved to play dress-up with her son and wanted to go back to school to study sonography.

Credit:
Shelby Tauber for The Texas Tribune

Ace helps Hammad with a temporary tattoo. “Day in, day out, we go through missing her,” Hammad said of her daughter, who died in 2021 of an overdose.

Credit:
Shelby Tauber for The Texas Tribune

A skeptical state

Kirby Jack adjusts their cap after sorting through harm reduction supplies in Dallas on Aug. 24.

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Emil Lippe for The Texas Tribune

A risky undertaking

Jack hands out harm reduction supplies to people on Gould Street in Dallas. Jack drives as far as two hours in their white minivan, down dirt roads, to drop off supplies across North Texas.

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Emil Lippe for The Texas Tribune

Jack takes a risk when distributing harm reduction supplies like fentanyl testing kits because they are illegal to carry in Texas. “In other states, harm reduction is built into public health — we deserve to have that same access,” they said.

Credit:
Emil Lippe for The Texas Tribune

“They deserve better”

Dambra finishes a handwritten note before placing it in a package of life-saving harm reduction supplies.

Credit:
Annie Mulligan for The Texas Tribune