MPH, NRP
(he/him)
Hotline Director
Harm Reduction Program Manager
Stephen Murray, MPH, NRP, is an overdose researcher, Harm Reduction Program Manager and the Director of the SafeSpot Overdose Hotline at Boston Medical Center. In 2021, he retired as a Lieutenant at a large regional ambulance service in Western Massachusetts, and had served as a first responder since 2013, having worked both as a firefighter and paramedic. He regularly shares for a national audience about his lived experience as a person who used drugs and overdose survivor. Stephen provides expert technical assistance around the topics of overdose prevention, emergency medical services and harm reduction to a variety of organizations, county and state governments across the country, including the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Agency, the National Academies of Medicine, and the National Governors Association. He has guest lectured at Harvard University, Northeastern University, University of Southern California, University of California San Diego Medical School, UMASS Medical School, Georgetown University, University of Pittsburgh, Boston University, Temple University and Ohio State University, and has research published in the International Journal of Drug Policy, Substance Use & Addiction Journal, American Journal of Public Health and Health Promotion Practice. In September 2023, he was featured in the multiple award-winning Episode 809 ("The Call") on This American Life.
(she/her)
Hotline Operations Coordinator
Kimber King is SafeSpot's Hotline Operations Coordinator. She draws on her own lived experience as an overdose survivor. She has extensive administrative responsibilities on the helpline team including quality improvement, operator recruitment and training, representing the helpline in public forums, and facilitating team meetings. She has guest lectured at Harvard University, Georgetown University, Boston University, Temple University and Williams College. She was featured on This American Life Episode 809 - The Call, and the Dopey Podcast.
MD, MSc
(he/him)
Medical Director
Alexander Y. Walley, M.D., M.Sc., is Professor of Medicine at Boston University School of Medicine and a general internist and addiction medicine specialist at Boston Medical Center. He has served as the medical director for the Massachusetts Department of Public Health’s Bureau of Substance Addiction Services and the Overdose Prevention Program. Since 2007, the MDPH program has trained and equipped over 100,000 people in Massachusetts’s communities with naloxone rescue kits, including people at-risk for overdose and their social networks. He provides primary care and office-based substance use care for patients with HIV at Boston Medical Center. He founded BMC’s inpatient Addiction Consult Service in 2015 and the Faster Paths low-barrier access substance use clinic in 2016. He previously was a site medical director for opioid treatment programs in Boston from 2007 to 2016. He has published over 160 peer-reviewed original research, review and case report journal articles focused on the medical complications of substance use, specifically HIV and overdose. He is principal investigator for CDC and NIH funded studies of community overdose interventions. For the NIH-funded HEALing Communities Study – Massachusetts, he served as the Care Continuum Core Director 2019-2022. For the 2022-2023 academic year he is taking a 12-month sabbatical to focus on his overdose prevention research.
MPH
(she/her)
Associate Director of Research Operations
Sarah Kosakowski is Associate Director of Research Operations in the Clinical Addiction and Research Education Unit at Boston Medical Center. She oversees a large research program focused on opioid overdose prevention, safer prescribing, and post-overdose outreach. Additionally, she lead efforts within the Informatics Core on the HEALing Communities Study to integrate community engagement and data driven decision making approaches into developing and implementing evidence-based strategies to reduce opioid overdose fatalities in Massachusetts communities. Sarah received her MPH from Boston University School of Public Health where she concentrated in health policy, law, and management and is passionate about translating research findings and public health data to communities in usable, interactive, and digestible formats.
MPH
(she/her)
Research Project Manager
Ally Cogan is a Research Project Manager in the Clinical Addiction and Research Education Unit at Boston Medical Center. She assists in the management of day-to-day operations and activities on research programs focused on opioid overdose prevention and post-overdose outreach. She received her MPH from Boston University School of Public Health where she concentrated in community assessment, program development, implementation, and evaluation. She is passionate about the development of equitable access to tailored healthcare for underserved populations and those typically overlooked by healthcare systems.
(they/them)
Overnight Lead Operator
Tj is a Harm Reductionist and Advocate for the legalization and implementation of Overdose Prevention Centers. Their work and experience doing street outreach for unhoused folks and PWUD drives them to continue to support the community in any capacity possible. Tj is an active member of SIFMA Now! and has served on the SCS Taskforce for the City of Somerville and the Substance Use Advisory Committee for the City of Cambridge.
CADC
(she/her)
Hotline Operator
(she/her)
Hotline Operator
I have been in Harm reduction utilizing, volunteering & working in the field for almost a decade. I’m happy to provide a safe, non-judgmental space for people in the community.
(she/her)
Hotline Operator
Sibylle is an advocate for harm reduction and full decriminalization. She has lived experience as a drug user and hotline caller that drives her to give back in any way possible.
(she/her)
Hotline Operator
Harm reduction plays a vital role in my life. I have witnessed many friends and family members who could have greatly benefitted from services like SafeSpot who are no longer with us. This experience drives my advocacy for various forms of harm reduction. I am thankful to provide a non-judgmental, safe environment where individuals can access the resources they need and deserve.
(she/they)
Hotline Operator
Abby had worn many different hats in her life before finding the field of substance use. Her head first introduction to the harm reduction world was as a research project manager at Boston Medical Center/Brandeis University, coordinating several studies working with people who use drugs. She was radicalized by the staff at all of the drug user health programs and now works to move others in that direction. Abby is excited about the amazing work that the MOPH has already done and honored to be a small part of it. If she’s not nose deep in a research project, you can find her rock climbing, skiing, or biking.
MPH (she/her)
Hotline Operator
Hi! I am Swathi and I am currently a student at Temple University studying Neuroscience and Public Health. I am certified in phlebotomy and work in medical services at Prevention Point Philadelphia. I am an avid harm reduction advocate and learned about this hotline from one of my professors. I try to give my callers a warm, welcoming, and safe environment. I love SafeSpot and the work we do and hope to continue doing more.
(she/her)
Hotline Operator
Hi! I’m Beyer. I graduated from Northeastern University in 2023 with a degree in Human Services, and I learned about the helpline through one of my courses. I joined as an operator because I believe in working for harm reduction and empowering the voices of those with lived experience. I’m grateful to be able to help provide this space for the community and excited to see MOPH grow!
BA (he/him)
Hotline Operator
I'm Kendra and I'm not only recovering, but I've helped reverse a handful of overdoses in my lifetime and I strive to continue helping those who need it while being part of an incredible team. I've always feared judgement, but SafeSpot has sparked a new hope in me and I love what we have to offer and I stand by what we do. 🧡
(she/her)
Hotline Operator
(he/him) Hotline Operator