“…Thus, although task shifting the frontline response at OPS to peer workers appears to be a feasible and effective response to the overdose epidemic, efforts are needed to ensure that peer workers receive adequate financial, social and emotional supports in order to avoid perpetuating workforce power imbalances, imposing unfair burdens on peers, and compromising the sustainability of this approach over the long term (Buchman et al, 2018;Greer et al, 2018;Mundeva et al, 2018). In particular, strategies such as offering fair and standardized compensation to peer workers would help to address concerns about their potential devaluation and exploitation, and would also ease financial constraints among these individuals to support their sustained retention as workers in OPS programming, thereby improving the quality and sustainability of services provided (Bardwell et al, 2018a;Buchman et al, 2018;Greer et al, 2018;Mijovic et al, 2016;Mundeva et al, 2018;Shearer et al, 2018). As well, greater funding and resources should be dedicated to expanding formalized trauma-and grief-related supportive services for local PWUD, and to providing peer workers with work-related benefits to support their well-being and mitigate potential harms or burdens they may be experiencing due to their critical role in the frontline response to the overdose epidemic (Buchman et al, 2018;Greer et al, 2018;Shearer et al, 2018).…”