Medication for Addiction Treatment and Electronic Referrals (MATTERS) was developed in 2016 in response to the opioid crisis in collaboration between UBMD Emergency Medicine and The University at Buffalo Jacobs School of Medicine and Biological Sciences. Today, MATTERS’ staff, partners, and stakeholders met to raise awareness on the program and progress made.
In anticipation of this exciting press event, the University at Buffalo disseminated a media release and developed two new videos highlighting MATTERS as a resource for individuals with opioid and substance use disorder.
External News: MATTERS Opioid Treatment Program Expands Its Reach
Expands Linkage to Lifesaving Care and Introduces ‘No Stigma’ Vending Machines
By: Ellen Goldbaum
January 22, 2024
BUFFALO, N.Y. — MATTERS, an innovative opioid treatment program that grew out of a University at Buffalo physician’s frustration with the limitations of care for patients who had overdosed, is expanding its services throughout New York State, thanks to funding from the state’s Department of Health.
With the $8 million grant — part of the opioid settlement funds distributed throughout the state last year — MATTERS is hiring additional regional outreach coordinators to expand its geographic reach, supporting “no stigma” vending machines and working with neighboring municipalities that want to model programs after MATTERS.
A Critical Component
“The MATTERS program makes a difference and is a critical component of the department’s ongoing efforts to expand access to harm-reduction services and end bias and discrimination surrounding opioid use disorder,” says James V. McDonald, MD, commissioner of the New York State Department of Health. “The department welcomes the collaboration with the University at Buffalo’s opioid-treatment program and the deployment of vending machines as an innovative tool to supplement existing harm-reduction programs throughout the state.”
Starting last fall, MATTERS has installed 12 “no stigma” vending machines throughout New York State (see map below), including here in Western New York. They provide free naloxone, the overdose antidote, and free test strips for fentanyl and xylazine.
The first one in Erie County is located outside the Kenmore Volunteer Fire Department, which hosts the machine; it is owned and serviced by Save the Michaels of the World, which raises awareness about drug addiction and its risks. Additional machines in Western New York are on Virginia Street in Buffalo and Main Street in Lockport.
“People with opioid use disorder can be reluctant to walk into a pharmacy to obtain test strips or naloxone,” says Joshua J. Lynch, DO, founder of MATTERS, a clinical associate professor of emergency medicine in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB and a physician with UBMD Emergeny Medicine. “So, we wanted the vending machines to be in different types of places, outside and always accessible.”

Retrieved from the University at Buffalo

Retrieved from the University at Buffalo