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1. Meet Angie Richardson
Angie Richardson, Marketing and Community Impact Coordinator at Woodland Centers, joins the show to discuss the life-saving importance of naloxone training. In addition to leading community education efforts, Andy also conducts internal and external trainings that promote awareness and reduce stigma.
2. Why Naloxone Training Matters
Woodland Centers offers community-based naloxone training to raise awareness, improve access, and fight stigma around overdose response. Naloxone (also known as Narcan) can reverse opioid overdoses and gives individuals the chance to survive and access further care.
3. It’s Not Just for “Addicts”
A common misconception is that naloxone is only for people struggling with addiction. In reality, it's a tool anyone can use in an emergency—just like CPR. You never know when someone in your community may need it.
4. Overdose Recognition and Response
Trainings cover how to recognize signs of an opioid overdose, respond appropriately, and administer naloxone safely. The goal is to equip people with the confidence to act quickly and effectively.
5. Naloxone Is a Bridge, Not a Cure
Naloxone doesn’t treat addiction—it buys time. It gives someone a second chance to seek help and connect with treatment and support services. It’s the beginning of a recovery path, not the end.
6. Safe to Use, Easy to Learn
One key message: naloxone is safe. If you give it to someone who isn’t actually overdosing, it won’t harm them. The biggest risk is not acting when someone needs help.
7. Training Is for Everyone
Woodland’s trainings are open to all—parents, teachers, teens, first responders, and community members. Anyone can learn how to save a life with naloxone.
8. Real Tools, Real Preparedness
Participants don’t just leave with knowledge—they leave with naloxone kits in hand. These are free, funded, and available after training sessions to ensure community members are truly prepared.
9. Partnerships Expand Reach
Woodland Centers works with schools, nonprofits, and community groups to spread access to naloxone across the region. The goal is to remove every barrier that stands between someone and a second chance.
10. Empowering Everyday Heroes
Naloxone training turns ordinary people into lifesavers. Whether it’s a teacher, coach, or grandparent, having the tools and confidence to step in during an overdose can make all the difference.
1. Meet Angie Richardson
Angie Richardson, Marketing and Community Impact Coordinator at Woodland Centers, joins the show to discuss the life-saving importance of naloxone training. In addition to leading community education efforts, Andy also conducts internal and external trainings that promote awareness and reduce stigma.
2. Why Naloxone Training Matters
Woodland Centers offers community-based naloxone training to raise awareness, improve access, and fight stigma around overdose response. Naloxone (also known as Narcan) can reverse opioid overdoses and gives individuals the chance to survive and access further care.
3. It’s Not Just for “Addicts”
A common misconception is that naloxone is only for people struggling with addiction. In reality, it's a tool anyone can use in an emergency—just like CPR. You never know when someone in your community may need it.
4. Overdose Recognition and Response
Trainings cover how to recognize signs of an opioid overdose, respond appropriately, and administer naloxone safely. The goal is to equip people with the confidence to act quickly and effectively.
5. Naloxone Is a Bridge, Not a Cure
Naloxone doesn’t treat addiction—it buys time. It gives someone a second chance to seek help and connect with treatment and support services. It’s the beginning of a recovery path, not the end.
6. Safe to Use, Easy to Learn
One key message: naloxone is safe. If you give it to someone who isn’t actually overdosing, it won’t harm them. The biggest risk is not acting when someone needs help.
7. Training Is for Everyone
Woodland’s trainings are open to all—parents, teachers, teens, first responders, and community members. Anyone can learn how to save a life with naloxone.
8. Real Tools, Real Preparedness
Participants don’t just leave with knowledge—they leave with naloxone kits in hand. These are free, funded, and available after training sessions to ensure community members are truly prepared.
9. Partnerships Expand Reach
Woodland Centers works with schools, nonprofits, and community groups to spread access to naloxone across the region. The goal is to remove every barrier that stands between someone and a second chance.
10. Empowering Everyday Heroes
Naloxone training turns ordinary people into lifesavers. Whether it’s a teacher, coach, or grandparent, having the tools and confidence to step in during an overdose can make all the difference.