In collaboration with the state of Arkansas and the collegiate recovery grant, we’re proud to debut our Leading Change on Campus training. It’s a groundbreaking tool that sources real-world advice and insight from End Overdose chapter founders and presidents, giving students all the resources they need to start their own collegiate movements. From how to structure internal communications systems, to successful fundraising mechanisms, everything is covered in the comprehensive course.
“With the support of the state of Arkansas, our Leading Change on Campus training will not only be a watershed moment for the overdose prevention and recovery movement on 15 college campuses throughout Arkansas, but nationwide. Students are the future and peer-based organizations will lead the way,” says End Overdose Founder and CEO Theo Krzywicki.“Our Leading Change on Campus training and initiative was especially made possible through the generous backing of Nick Fuller from the Arkansas Division of Higher Education, Cody Conway from the Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health and University of Arkansas at Little Rock, and their departments as a whole. We’re grateful for their ongoing collaborations with End Overdose.”
The Leading Change on Campus training builds upon End Overdose’s classic overdose response training, a virtual resource that has equipped hundreds of thousands of American residents with the tips and tools to save a life. On the heels of End Overdose’s Narcat’s World video game that gamified our classic training course, Leading Change on Campus is the first of many new forays into educating young people about their ability to affect change and learn to assess the landscape of the overdose crisis.
If you want to see more innovative content from End Overdose in the coming months and years, consider donating at endoverdose.net.
No one else has to die.
