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How to see seven Greek islands in a week — in serious style
How to see seven Greek islands in a week — in serious style

Times

time3 days ago

  • Times

How to see seven Greek islands in a week — in serious style

We've all seen them on a summer holiday and felt a twinge of jealousy. I'm talking about the smug people on yachts. Picture this: you're sitting in a quaint Greek taverna by the harbour. A plate of moussaka and carafe of cheap plonk are under way. The sun is setting and you're feeling pretty good about your holiday, when — like an uninvited dinner party guest — a sleek superyacht glides up and drops anchor. You can even hear the champagne bottles popping. It's enough to make you feel sick. Well, last summer in Greece, for the first and possibly last time, I was not on the harbour looking on enviously. I was on the yacht. And I can confirm, it was glorious. Two years ago I made my cruise debut on the 25-cabin Elysium, the first ship from the boutique Greek cruise line Elixir. I well and truly caught the cruising bug. Last summer I tried out its second ship, Gemaya, which, with just five cabins, is even more exclusive. I must admit that the thought of sharing such a confined space with eight strangers was a leap of faith. But the cabins have Netflix, and the latest series of Bridgerton had just come out, so at least I had a back-up plan. There are three routes around Greece and mine, Aegean Escape, ambitiously packs in seven islands in seven days. But, as I learnt on my last cruise, when the winds pick up — as they often do in the Cyclades, the schedule goes out of the window. We miss out Antiparos and Ios, but add Anafi and Santorini — which is fine by me, but it helps not to get too attached to your original itinerary. Think of it more like a rough outline of where you might go. When you're on a yacht this swish, though, it's hard to complain. A private transfer drops me at Lavrio port to board the ship. I deposit my shoes in a basket and explore the yacht, which takes all of five minutes. After a tentative hello to my fellow guests, we're quickly slicing through the waves to port in Kythnos with a glass of rosé in hand. After a long (and a much less glamorous) working life with the Swedish army, the 33m yacht Gemaya has had a serious makeover and is now spending a happy retirement cruising the Cyclades. Its interior rivals even the swishest of superyachts. You pad around barefoot on thick cream carpet that is probably a nightmare to keep clean — always a sign of true wealth, I think. Cabins are wood-panelled with leather trims and Molton Brown toiletries. There's more than a little hint of Succession about it all. There are plenty of nooks where you can swerve the other passengers if you're feeling antisocial. An indoor dining room, upstairs living room with a sink-in corner sofa, and four separate outdoor areas including a hot tub and communal seating at the back where we do our best Logan Roy impressions, drinking whisky until the early hours. For the alfresco-inclined, you can sleep on a rooftop bed — a plum spot for stargazing. • 19 of the best Greek island cruises My first evening is spent at a long table in the dining room getting to know my fellow passengers over a dinner of squid ink linguine. Two sisters from South Africa; couples from Finland and Australia; and Ioannis Terdimos, Elixir's owner who seems to lead a very nice life, splitting his time between Dubai, Athens and the ship. 'This is another level of cruising,' says Terdimos, looking out at the topaz-blue water of Poliegos — an uninhabited island off the coast of Milos — where we head on our third day. 'People told us this would never work. Ten people, all strangers, together on a boat for a whole week,' he says. It's true that on paper the Gemaya is a risky proposition. It's luck of the draw who the other guests are, and then you're stuck with them for a week. But at the start of 2024 Terdimos did a few trial runs on the Gemaya. The boat was stocked with board games to keep people entertained. As well as Netflix, there's wi-fi, a video console and TV upstairs for children (although no under 14s are permitted, unless the yacht is chartered privately). But the board games stayed in their boxes. 'They all wanted to eat together at the same table,' Terdimos says. 'We've had people make friends and swap numbers at the end of the week.' Elixir is an exciting new cruise line to watch. After launching its first ship, Elysium in 2021, and a bit of a shaky start thanks to Covid, all cruises for the 2024 season were booked out. The company is adding a third ship to the fleet in 2026 and hopefully another the year after. The company is run by Terdimos and his ex-wife, Manya Louvari — Gemaya is named after them and their son, George. • The boutique new cruise company that feels like a yacht Thanks to the proximity of the islands, minimal time is spent sailing. There's fun to be had renting a moped at the port (£17 a day for most islands). On Kimolos — less touristy than its neighbour, Milos — I spend the afternoon stopping at beaches after zipping along dirt tracks past dusty fields full of goats. Gemaya is even better than chartering your own yacht because for the whole week I don't lift a finger. There's a crew of five who do everything from serving drinks and turning down the bedrooms to organising watersports (sea bobs, water skis, snorkels and paddleboards). Stefanos Bagkos is the happy-go-lucky ship's captain who makes sure we're up to date with swim stops via a WhatsApp group. Sometimes we drop anchor only long enough to paddleboard to shore and lay our towels on the sand before we're hopping to another island. In all honesty, sometimes it's hard to keep track of them. I spend a very undignified afternoon at a peaceful bay on Sifnos being hurled around on an inflatable doughnut attached to a speed boat — most definitely not demure yachting behaviour. My favourite island is Folegandros, its arid brown mountain range protruding from the sea like the spine of a dragon. An early evening hike up to the Church of Panagia, where the whole island unfurls before you, is one of the highlights of the holiday. As well as obviously feeling like Jackie Onassis sidling up to port and walking the passerelle (translation: gangplank) like you're on a red carpet, one of the other advantages of Elixir is that the cruises are all half-board, meaning you get to eat dinner where you want. Cruise passengers often come under fire for not spending money in the local economy, especially important in the Cyclades, a seasonal tourist spot where resident numbers on some islands are in the double digits. Some on our cruise opt for rosette-worthy fine dining but I never tire of freshly grilled sardines with a wedge of lemon and Greek salad at a paper-tablecloth taverna. There is one particularly standout meal, though, at the Makris restaurant at the Domes resort on Milos, an island with no direct international flights to the UK but one that is quickly becoming the must-visit for the jet set. Dinner of sea bass cooked in lobster butter is served with a view of the infinity pool that stretches into a yawning sunset with the lunar rock formations of Sarakiniko beach in the distance (mains from £23; After becoming accustomed to stopping on tiny islands like Anafi (population about 300), I'm braced for chaos when we pull into the caldera of Santorini and our dinky yacht is immediately dwarfed by three big cruise ships. But it turns out to be the ideal way to see the Instagram-famous island: we visit the blue-domed churches of Oia — then retreat a safe distance away to the water for the night. I sip my final whisky of the trip with the other passengers and watch the twinkling lights of Santorini in the distance. We swap Instagram accounts and numbers and vow to stay in touch. My Netflix account remains unused. Tomorrow I'll be on an easyJet flight back home, but for one final night, I feel like the one per Gatens was a guest of Elixir Cruises, which has seven nights' half-board on an Aegean Escape voyage from £3,260pp, including an open bar and transfers for travel between May and October ( Fly to Athens

Elysium Investments Expands One of the GTA's Leading Purpose-Built Rental Pipelines with Sixth Transit-Oriented Acquisition at 41
Elysium Investments Expands One of the GTA's Leading Purpose-Built Rental Pipelines with Sixth Transit-Oriented Acquisition at 41

Cision Canada

time19-06-2025

  • Business
  • Cision Canada

Elysium Investments Expands One of the GTA's Leading Purpose-Built Rental Pipelines with Sixth Transit-Oriented Acquisition at 41

Acquisition expands pipeline to more than 4,250 homes and C$3.24 billion in projected completion value; bolsters one of the GTA 's largest purpose–built rental pipelines TORONTO, June 19, 2025 /CNW/ - Elysium Investments Inc., a fast–growing real–estate development firm specializing in transit–oriented intensification, today announced the acquisition of 41–47 Talara Drive in North York. The strategic purchase marks Elysium's sixth major acquisition since its 2023 launch, bringing the company's active pipeline to approximately 3.22 million square feet of gross floor area and more than 4,250 purpose–built rental homes. "This is density with purpose—on transit, by design," said Sayf Hassan, Chief Executive Officer of Elysium Investments. "We're not chasing rooftops. We're building rooted, resilient communities." Site Highlights Address: 41–47 Talara Drive, North York, Ontario Transit Access: Three–minute walk to Sheppard–Yonge Station (TTC Lines 1 & 4) Planned Program: High–rise purpose–built rental tower emphasizing design, livability and sustainable mobility Coming Soon — Yarra: Redefining Purpose–Built Student Accommodation Explore the platform at In tandem with its core residential work, Elysium is poised to launch Yarra, a next–generation platform for purpose–built student accommodation (PBSA). Designed around flexibility, community, and professional management, Yarra will deliver thoughtfully priced rental housing tailored to the evolving needs of post–secondary students. "Yarra will give students more than a bed—it will give them a place to belong," added Hassan. About Elysium Investments Inc. Founded in 2023, Elysium Investments Inc. is a privately held real–estate investment and development company focused on creating design–forward, transit–oriented communities across the Greater Toronto Area. The firm was co–founded by Harley Mintz, former Vice–Chair of Deloitte Canada, and Jamie Torpey, a 35-year real estate veteran and founder of VPH, a European retail developer. with extensive development experience in Europe. Under the leadership of CEO Sayf Hassan, Elysium is unlocking under–utilized urban sites and delivering housing solutions that respond to Toronto's pressing affordability and livability challenges.

Mental health: The productivity puzzle
Mental health: The productivity puzzle

New Statesman​

time16-06-2025

  • Health
  • New Statesman​

Mental health: The productivity puzzle

Photo courtesy of Elysium Healthcare In the context of economic turbulence and rising workforce inactivity, the scale of unmet mental health need risks undermining the government's ambitions for productivity and growth. Despite growing political awareness, solutions remain piecemeal and often fail to match the urgency and scale of the problem. With the imminent publication of the NHS 10-Year Health Plan, and the Government's pledge to 'Get Britain Working' a central pillar of policymaking, there is an opportunity to rethink the foundations of our mental health system to the benefit of those struggling with mental health difficulties and our economic future. Mental ill health often sidelines people from work, but too often the focus is on tightening access to welfare rather than tackling the underlying drivers of poor mental health. The current approach misses the point: if we want to get people back into work, we must give them a system that helps them get well. Recent data paints a stark picture of economic inactivity due to long-term sickness, with a record 4 million people not participating in the labour market due to a work-limiting health condition. Mental health is one of the leading causes among working-age adults, with 15 per cent of households reportedly taking time off work due to mental ill-health. Among younger people, the statistics are even more troubling, as depression, anxiety, and more severe mental health conditions prevent entry into employment altogether. Mental ill health is now the most common cause of work-limiting conditions among those aged 44 and younger, and nearly 1 in 4 people out of work due to ill health are under 35. The proportion of young people out of work in the UK because of mental health problems has nearly doubled between 2012 and 2022. The result is a growing cohort of people unable to participate in or contribute to the economy, not through lack of will, but because of the system failing to meet their needs. This is not just a health challenge; it is an economic one. Any serious strategy for restoring national productivity must reckon with mental health as a central pillar, not a peripheral concern. What makes this crisis more urgent is the deeply uneven access to care across the country. Elysium has analysed available national and regional data resources to examine the stark variation in mental health service access, revealing pockets of particularly high need where local systems are struggling to respond. In some areas, patients face long waits, a lack of appropriate provision, and are routinely placed far from home. Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe Indeed, hospital admissions for mental health conditions for children range substantially by region, between 70.04 (per 100,000) in the East of England, to 124.9 in the South West. Regional differences in inappropriate out of area placements (OAP) are also stark, with patients experiencing more than double the number of inappropriate OAP bed days in London by comparison with the South West. The number of people in contact with NHS-funded secondary mental health, learning disabilities and autism services ranges from 5,590 (per 100,000) in the South West, to 7,074 (per 100,000) in North East and Yorkshire. Data reveals marked regional disparities in suicide rates, ranging from 7.3 (per 100,000) in London, to 14.7 (per 100,000) in the North West. People living in more deprived areas face a disproportionately higher risk: between 2017 and 2019, the suicide rate in the most deprived 10 per cent of areas in England was 14.1 per 100,000, nearly double the rate of 7.4 per 100,000 seen in the least deprived areas. The link between socio-economic deprivation and poor mental health is well established: people living in the most deprived areas are twice as likely to experience mental health conditions, with earlier onset, greater severity, and less access to early intervention. These disparities are no coincidence. They are the result of years of underinvestment, fragmented commissioning, and a lack of planning for high-acuity support. With patchy infrastructure and stretched local systems, people will continue to fall through the gaps. There is a growing consensus that mental health reform is needed. But too often, policymakers reach for singular, simplistic fixes rather than recognising the need for wholesale, pathway-wide reform. Prevention and early support are vital, but on their own, they are not enough. The Darzi Review was clear: demand for inpatient and acute care is rising sharply, yet the estate is crumbling and out of step with modern therapeutic needs. At the same time, long waits for community mental health services leave many without timely support. There is a shared ambition across the system to shift care closer to home and upstream, but this can only succeed if investment spans the entire pathway, from early intervention through to crisis response, inpatient care, and step-down support. To meet the complexity of today's mental health needs, local systems must be empowered with the tools, resources, and partnerships to respond flexibly across the continuum of care. Independent sector providers can play an important role here. Working in genuine partnership with the NHS and local communities, they offer insights, agility, and capacity to co-design services that address local gaps, whether through crisis beds, specialised inpatient provision, or integrated step-down units. When done well, this collaborative approach ensures support is in place where it's needed most. The Government must treat mental health as a fundamental component of its wider health and economic ambitions, not a secondary concern. Embedding it throughout the 10-Year Health Plan is essential to ensuring the system is equipped to meet levels of need, from early support to specialist care. We won't build a more productive nation by restricting support or narrowing access to care. True recovery, for individuals and the economy, depends on early, sustained intervention across the full mental health pathway. That means reducing pressure on services, supporting people to get well, and ultimately helping them return to work and rebuild their lives. We urge government to be bold. Reform must be rooted in evidence, backed by proper investment, and inclusive of the full spectrum of care. Elysium stands ready to work with national and local partners to deliver that vision, supporting a mental health system that is fit for purpose and capable of meeting the full range of needs across the country. If you would like to discuss how we can work together to meet these challenges, please feel free to get in touch: Related

Operation Rising Lion: How Israel's masterclass in precision strikes destroyed Iran's nuclear program; and left Tehran in shambles
Operation Rising Lion: How Israel's masterclass in precision strikes destroyed Iran's nuclear program; and left Tehran in shambles

Time of India

time13-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Time of India

Operation Rising Lion: How Israel's masterclass in precision strikes destroyed Iran's nuclear program; and left Tehran in shambles

In the early hours of June 13, 2025, Israel unleashed a three-pronged campaign into the very heart of Iranian military infrastructure. Prime Minister Netanyahu called it 'a historic campaign unlike any other.' And for once, he undersold it. This wasn't about showing capability. It was about consequences. Frederick Forsyth, the master spy thriller writer who left for Elysium recently, had a beautiful talent for writing such meticulously detailed novels that, in some cases, reality followed his imagination . Icon, about the rise of a Russian demagogue after the Cold War, eerily foretold Vladimir Putin's ascent. The Fist of God revolved around a US-UK plot to destroy Saddam Hussein's imaginary nuclear weapons. Of course, Saddam tried. Iraq's Osirak reactor, built with French help, was flattened by the Israeli Air Force in 1981 during Operation Opera—a preemptive strike that set the standard for surgical audacity. Fast forward two decades, and the Bush administration used fictional WMDs to justify war, only to find ghosts in the ruins. But it's not Iraq that Israel has watched most closely. It's Iran—a regime that has spent decades perfecting the art of ambiguity while inching toward nuclear breakout capability. And while the West holds UN sessions and drafts toothless resolutions, Israel acts—sometimes quietly, often lethally. Stuxnet. Magnetic bombs in Tehran traffic. Scientists who never saw the sunrise. And now, Operation Rising Lion—an operation so precise and so devastating that it felt like Forsyth wrote the script that Netanyahu directed, Mossad and IDF produced. Operation Rising Lion : A Strategic Deep Dive In the early hours of June 13, 2025, Israel unleashed a three-pronged campaign into the very heart of Iranian military infrastructure. Prime Minister Netanyahu called it 'a historic campaign unlike any other.' And for once, he undersold it. This wasn't about showing capability. It was about consequences. The Three Phases Operation Rising Lion was a chess game played over years. Israeli intelligence had spent months embedding assets, surveying terrain, identifying vulnerabilities, and pre-positioning ordnance. Phase 1 — Mossad constructed an underground drone base near Tehran. This wasn't a forward operating station—it was a Trojan horse built with screwdrivers, cash, and perfect Farsi. As the operation commenced, kamikaze drones launched toward the Asfajaabad missile base, shredding Iran's missile silos before a single projectile could be fired. Phase 2 — IDF units, using Mossad-planted precision-guided weapons systems, activated pre-positioned devices near radar and air defence sites. The blasts took out radar arrays, missile guidance systems, and anti-air platforms, rendering Iranian skies blind. Phase 3 — With airspace cleared, Israeli fighter jets flew in. Guided by real-time telemetry from drones and operatives, they launched bunker-busting munitions into fortified complexes—most notably Natanz and Parchin. Iran's second-strike options were nullified. A Secret Base In one of the most audacious feats of clandestine engineering, Mossad didn't just infiltrate Iranian territory—it built an explosive drone base inside it. Situated near Tehran, it served as a launch point for explosive-laden UAVs targeting missile infrastructure. Simultaneously, guided weapons in central Iran were activated, demolishing radar arrays and missile guidance platforms. With Iran's defences neutralised, the skies opened up. The operation unfolded as: Planted Precision — Pre-positioned munitions remotely detonated. Concealed Launchers — Smuggled Israeli systems disguised as civilian vehicles took out remaining air defences. Drone Swarms — Kamikaze UAVs from the clandestine base vaporised Iran's missile capacity. What Was Hit—and Who Was Killed—and How? This wasn't war by attrition. It was war by forensic scheduling—each man identified, tracked, and struck at his most vulnerable. Four senior figures were killed in coordinated assassinations: Major General Hossein Salami — Head of the IRGC, killed at his fortified residence in Shahrak Shahid Mahalati. A micro-drone, disguised as part of the HVAC system, infiltrated his study and detonated with surgical precision. Dr. Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani — Former Atomic Energy Organisation chief, targeted en route to a secure facility. A quadcopter drone, pre-programmed and GPS-locked, struck his vehicle outside Parchin. General Mohammad Bagheri — Iran's Armed Forces Chief of Staff, eliminated at a temporary coordination hub in north Tehran. Israeli drones triangulated his position using cellular signal interception; a laser-guided munition did the rest. General Amir Ali Hajizadeh — Commander of the IRGC Aerospace Force, killed at Asfajaabad after stepping out of a hardened bunker. A loitering munition, likely IDF-operated and visually confirmed, hit his parked vehicle just as he approached. These were not opportunistic hits. Each was the product of months of surveillance, facial recognition, signal capture, and a strike matrix that synchronised bombs with biometric certainty. They didn't die because they were careless. They died because Israel knew exactly where and when to look. Strategic Targets Destroyed Natanz Nuclear Complex — Bunker-busters collapsed centrifuge halls and electrical nodes. Parchin Military Complex — Suspected nuclear warhead site destroyed. Secondary explosions confirmed presence of volatile materials. Shahrak Shahid Mahalati — IRGC elite residential zone. Three high-rises demolished in precision strikes. Asfajaabad Base — Missile infrastructure reduced to rubble. Legacy of Precision: A Doctrine Forged in Shadow FILE - Missiles are carried on a truck as an Iranian army band leader conducts the music band during Army Day parade at a military base in northern Tehran, Iran, Wednesday, April 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Vahid Salemi, File) Operation Rising Lion joins a long tradition: 1 960 – Operation Finale — Mossad agents tracked and captured Adolf Eichmann in Argentina, smuggled him back to Israel, and put him on trial. It showed the world that time and distance do not dilute justice. 1981 – Operation Opera — Israeli jets flew over 1,000 miles to destroy Iraq's Osirak nuclear reactor in a single, perfectly-timed raid. It preemptively crushed Saddam's nuclear ambitions. 2007 – Operation Orchard — A suspected Syrian nuclear reactor built with North Korean help was obliterated in minutes by the Israeli Air Force. Damascus denied it even existed—until the debris told another story. 2010–2020 – Iran's Vanishing Scientists — From Tehran traffic to lab corridors, five top nuclear scientists were assassinated, culminating in the machine-gun hit on Mohsen Fakhrizadeh . It was a shadow war fought in daylight. Israel doesn't bluff. It enforces. International Reaction and Literary Echoes Tehran denied the scale of damage. Foreign Minister Abdollahian called it 'Zionist terrorism.' Russia issued a tepid condemnation. China urged restraint. The US said nothing—suggesting tacit approval. Analysts across Langley, Vauxhall Cross, and RAW's Lodhi Road studied every second. For them, Rising Lion isn't just a success—it's a syllabus. And somewhere in a leather-bound edition of The Fist of God, the pages hum with vindication. What Forsyth imagined, Israel executed. Strategic Takeaways Human Intelligence Is the Ultimate Weapon — Mastery over terrain, language, and loyalty trumped firepower. This Wasn't War—It Was Orchestration — Drone swarms, planted bombs, satellite coordination—a symphony of destruction. Air Defence Is a Delusion — Iran's S-300s and Bavar-373 systems never saw it coming. Assassination Is Deterrence — Elites killed in their beds and bunkers sent a clear message. The Real Fist of God That wasn't fiction. It was the cold calculus of a man who knew how real stories end. In one night, Israel rewrote doctrine—and genre. Where others saw deterrence as theatre, it delivered a climax without rehearsal. The drones, the assassinations—every thread bore Forsyth's spirit: precise, plausible, and terrifyingly efficient. Because if The Fist of God imagined the plot, Operation Rising Lion executed it.

Elysium Therapeutics' Investor Webcast Highlights "Fentanyl Rebound" as Key Challenge in Reducing Opioid Overdose Hospitalizations and Deaths
Elysium Therapeutics' Investor Webcast Highlights "Fentanyl Rebound" as Key Challenge in Reducing Opioid Overdose Hospitalizations and Deaths

Yahoo

time11-06-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Elysium Therapeutics' Investor Webcast Highlights "Fentanyl Rebound" as Key Challenge in Reducing Opioid Overdose Hospitalizations and Deaths

Elysium's Synthetic Opioid Overdose Prevention and Reversal (SOOPR™) technology designed specifically to combat oral fentanyl overdose LYONS, Colo., June 11, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Elysium Therapeutics, an emerging biopharmaceutical company developing treatments specifically designed to rescue and reverse overdoses caused by oral opioids, including synthetic opioids like fentanyl, recently hosted a webcast to educate investors and pharmaceutical leaders on the pressing need to develop overdose rescue therapies designed specifically for synthetic opioids, like fentanyl. Entitled, "Innovating Solutions to Combat Fentanyl Rebound" and led by Greg Sturmer, CEO, the presentation noted that short-acting opioid antagonists like Narcan® and Opvee® are frequently ineffective in the management of synthetic opioid overdoses1, with 20 to 45% of overdose victims initially rescued with naloxone experiencing a re-narcotization event. Sturmer commented: "When fentanyl is taken orally, individuals can face a danger zone, a period of respiratory depression that can last six to eight hours, which far outlasts the window provided by currently available rescue agents that only last, at most, 30 minutes. The result is nearly half of those initially given a dose of today's rescue medications experience a rebound or re-narcotization event, which can lead to a hypoxic brain injury, cardiovascular toxicity or death." To address this critical shortcoming, Elysium designed its Synthetic Opioid Overdose Prevention and Reversal (SOOPR™) technology to be both faster acting and with the potential to offer overdose protection out to approximately 24-hours. Additionally, Elysium designed SOOPR with an intramuscular route of administration, which grants more reliable dosing, in comparison to intranasal administration, which can lead to partial and uncertain dosing in high stress settings. Sturmer added: "SOOPR was designed specifically for synthetic opioids, which are now the number one killer of adults aged 18 to 45 in the U.S. The need for a rapid-acting, long-duration reversal agent, such as SOOPR, is extreme given its potential to reduce the likelihood of hypoxic brain injury, cardiovascular events, re-narcotization, and death. Recognizing this opportunity, Elysium is planning to rapidly advance the SOOPR clinical program along a timeline that could enable the technology to reach the market in the next two to three years." About SOOPR™ (Synthetic Opioid Overdose Prevention and Rescue) SOOPR (Synthetic Opioid Overdose Prevention and Reversal) is a rapid-onset, long-acting rescue agent specifically designed to address overdose from synthetic opioids, including oral fentanyl. SOOPR utilizes a proprietary long-acting naloxone reversal formulation with faster onset kinetics versus Narcan® delivered via long-acting injection (LAI) technology. The technology is designed to rapidly restore respiration and provide 18 – 24 hours of effective opioid blockade to minimize the risk of re-narcotization, while also providing protection from same-day re-use of opioids. SOOPR has been endorsed by first responders and OUD treatment professionals as the effective solution urgently needed to address the global opioid overdose epidemic. About Elysium Therapeutics Elysium is an emerging biopharmaceutical company developing treatments specifically designed to rescue and reverse overdoses caused by oral synthetic opioids, including fentanyl. Elysium is working to establish new standards of safety in the opioid industry by developing SMART™ (Safer Medicines Alleviate Risks and Trauma) products, first- and best-in-class medicines that address the limitations and dangers associated with opioids and overdose rescue agents to reduce suffering from opioid-use disorder, opioid overdose, and acute pain. Elysium's lead technology, SOOPR™ (Synthetic Opioid Overdose Prevention and Reversal), is a long-acting opioid antagonist specifically designed to address oral synthetic opioid, including fentanyl, overdose. Tens of thousands of unnecessary overdose deaths each year exemplifies the critical shortcomings of currently available rescue agents, including naloxone and nalmefene. In addition, Elysium is developing oral-overdose protected (O2P™) hydrocodone for the treatment of moderate-to-severe acute pain. For more information, please visit ContactTiberend Strategic Advisors, IncInvestors Media David Irish Casey McDonald (231) 632-0002 (646) 577-8520 dirish@ cmcdonald@ ¹ Rachael Rzasa Lynn and JL Galinkin Ther Adv Drug Saf 2018, Vol. 9(1) 63–88. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Elysium Therapeutics Sign in to access your portfolio

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