Difference between revisions of "Increase Access to Overdose Reversal Medications"

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= Introductory Paragraph=
=Improve Access to Treatments that Prevent Overdose Deaths=
Return to [[Opioid Top-Level Strategy Map]] or [[ZOOM Map - Expand Harm Reduction Practices Associated with Opioid Misuse|Zoom Map (Expand Harm Reduction Practices Associated with Opioid Misuse)]]<br /> <div id="toc">
=Table of Contents=
<div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Naloxone (Narcan)|Naloxone (Narcan)]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Naloxone (Narcan)-Evidence of Effectiveness|Evidence of Effectiveness]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Current Efforts|Current Efforts]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Current Efforts-City, Town-wide, and Regional Efforts|City, Town-wide, and Regional Efforts]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Promising Programs and Practices|Promising Programs and Practices]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Promising Programs and Practices-Naloxone in Schools|Naloxone in Schools]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Promising Programs and Practices-Naloxone for Family Members of People with OUDs|Naloxone for Family Members of People with OUDs]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Promising Programs and Practices-Naloxone for First Responders|Naloxone for First Responders]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Promising Programs and Practices-Naloxone in Public Libraries|Naloxone in Public Libraries]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Promising Programs and Practices-Naloxone in Homeless Shelters and Congregate Housing|Naloxone in Homeless Shelters and Congregate Housing]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Educate about Dangers of Dual use|Educate about Dangers of Dual use]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Waive Copays|Waive Copays]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Legislation & Policy|Legislation & Policy]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Legislation & Policy-Good Samaritan Laws|Good Samaritan Laws]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Legislation & Policy-Increasing Awareness of Law|Increasing Awareness of Law]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Legislation & Policy-Federal Changes to Address Problem|Federal Changes to Address Problem]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Legislation & Policy-State Law Passage|State Law Passage]]</div><div style="margin-left: 2em">[[#Legislation & Policy-Pharmacists|Pharmacists]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#New in 2016: Improved Access to Nasal Narcan|New in 2016: Improved Access to Nasal Narcan]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Law Enforcement Use of Naloxone|Law Enforcement Use of Naloxone]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Database of State Legislative Efforts|Database of State Legislative Efforts]]</div><div style="margin-left: 3em">[[#Database of State Legislative Efforts--Prevent Overdose strategies|Prevent Overdose strategies]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Engaging Diverse Community Partners|Engaging Diverse Community Partners]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Tools & Resources|Tools & Resources]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Scorecard Building|Scorecard Building]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Resources to Investigate|Resources to Investigate]]</div><div style="margin-left: 1em">[[#Sources|Sources]]</div></div>
=Naloxone (Narcan)=
[[Additional Info on Naloxone|Naloxone]] (Narcan) is a prescription medicine that can reverse an opioid overdose or prevent it long enough for the person to receive adequate medical care. It blocks the opioid receptors in the brain to prevent an opioid user’s breathing and heart rates from slowing to fatal levels. Beginning in 2016, thirty-five states have made Narcan available to the general public as an over-the-counter drug to use as a nasal spray. Many other states are now working to pass laws that give police, first responders, and concerned family members the ability to carry and administer Narcan when called to a possible overdose situation. It is either injected or administered in a nasal spray.<br /> <br />  While [[Additional Info on Naloxone|Naloxone]] is not readily available by ordinary citizens, it can be easily administered with little or no formal training. State laws have made it difficult for citizens to obtain the life-saving medication, due to third-party prescription and prescription via standing order policies. The third party-prescription law prohibits the prescription of drugs to a third party other than whom the drugs will be given to, while the standing order law prohibits the prescription of drugs to a person not personally examined by the prescribing physician. Although, the drug could potentially save more lives if more widely distributed, there is fear of bystanders not summoning medical assistance due to possible prosecution against them.<br /> <br />  According to a report by CADCA, a small community in Connecticut has made training for first responders to an overdose mandatory. Officers found a man in an unconscious state and realized he was overdosing. With the administration of Narcan, the man was able to recover from the overdose and regain consciousness.<br /> <br />  Narcan has the potential to be very beneficial in communities with a high opioid problem. Making a community aware of it's existence, and it's power to reverse overdose is a benefit unlike any other. Narcan will allow victims of abuse to be more likely to survive an overdose when first responders are rightly prepared. This medicine is one of need if a community is struggling with an opioid problem.<br />  It has been effective in saving lives, giving people with addiction a chance to realize the depth of their problem and a chance to ask for help.<sup class="reference">[1]</sup><br /> <br />
==Evidence of Effectiveness==
There is some evidence that opioid overdose education and naloxone distribution programs increase knowledge of appropriate overdose response among participating opioid users and others likely to encounter an overdose situation. Naloxone distribution through such programs is associated with reduced overdose deaths and appears to increase participant's confidence in their ability to respond effectively to overdose situations. However, additional evidence is needed to confirm effects.<br /> <br />  Communities that implement programs to train potential bystanders to identify an opioid overdose and respond with naloxone appear to reduce opioid overdose death rates more than communities that do not implement such programs.<br /> <br />  Family and friends of opioid users have greater knowledge of opioid overdose and ability to respond appropriately after receiving training in naloxone administration than peers who learn about opioid overdose and naloxone via na information booklet. Current or former opioid users who have received training in overdose response appear to identify overdose and recognize conditions when naloxone is appropriate as accurately as medical experts. Some studies suggest that opioid users who have participated in only a brief 5-10 minute training or learned naloxone administration through social networks can respond appropriately to an overdose.<br /> <br />  Training first responders such as police, firefighters, and EMTs to administer naloxone may reduce time to overdose rescue, possibly decreasing overdose-related injury and death. Law enforcement officers who participate in naloxone administration adn overdose training report increases in knowledge and confidence in managing opioid overdose emergencies after program completion.<br /> <br />  A recent study in Massachusetts found that cities that have naloxone distribution programs have [http://www.bmj.com/content/346/bmj.f174 lower overdose death] rates than those that don’t. Similarly, the [http://www.nchrc.org/programs-and-services/ North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition] has given out 52,000 naloxone kits since 2013 through their statewide grass roots network that includes syringe exchange and naloxone distribution, with more than 8,700 overdose reversals reported.<br /> [http://www.cadca.org/resources/coalition-action-meriden-healthy-youth-coalition-mhyc-provides-life-saving-overdose CADCA: Narcan Awareness]<sup class="reference">[2]</sup><br /> <br />
=Current Efforts=
There are many steps that can be taken to increase the likelihood of having Naloxone available and more likely to be used to prevent deaths due to opioid overdose.<br />
==City, Town-wide, and Regional Efforts==
[https://www.baltimorecountymd.gov/news/baltimorecountynow/Kamenetz_Announces_Significant_County_Substance_Abuse_Initiatives_ Baltimore, MD]<sup class="reference">[3]</sup><br />


* Providing Naloxone to County police officers will cost approximately $14,000 every year; with a single dose costing about $40.
Naloxone (Narcan) has the potential to be very beneficial in communities with a high opioid problem. Increasing community awareness about the power of Narcan to reverse overdose is a benefit unlike any other. Narcan is a prescription medicine that can reverse an opioid overdose or prevent it long enough for the person to receive adequate medical care. It blocks the opioid receptors in the brain to prevent breathing and heart rates from slowing to fatal levels. It has been effective in saving lives, giving people with addiction a chance to realize the depth of their problem and a chance to ask for help. <ref>Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Heroin and Prescription Painkillers: A Toolkit for Community Action. 2016.</ref> Narcan will allow victims of substance abuse to be more likely to survive an overdose when first responders are rightly prepared. Many states are working to pass laws that give police, first responders, and concerned family members the ability to carry and administer Narcan when called to a possible overdose situation.  
* “Since police officers often arrive on the scene first, it makes sense for them to have this highly successful treatment at hand so they can administer it immediately and revive the person,” - Police Chief Jim Johnson.
* The Baltimore County Department of Health is offering free, two-hour training sessions for the public on how to recognize, prevent and respond to an opioid overdose by using intra-nasal naloxone.<sup class="reference">[4]</sup>
* [http://www.ddap.pa.gov/overdose/Pages/Naloxone_Reversal.aspx David's Law]
<br />  Work in rural[http://wilkeshealth.com/  Wilkes County, NC], to distribute naloxone led to the overdose death rate dropping from 46.6 per 100,000 in 2009 to 29 per 100,000 in 2010. Overdose deaths are down 69% in Wilkes County between 2009 and 2011. <sup class="reference">[5]</sup><br /> <br />
=Promising Programs and Practices=
==Naloxone in Schools==
Add info here...<br /> <br /> <br />
==Naloxone for Family Members of People with OUDs==
Add info here...<br /> <br />
==Naloxone for First Responders==
Add info here...<br /> <br />
==Naloxone in Public Libraries==
Add info here...<br /> <br />
==Naloxone in Homeless Shelters and Congregate Housing==
Get the 10 best practices shared at the National Healthcare for the Homeless presentation. <br />  Get links to educational posters ibid.<br />  
=Educate about Dangers of Dual use=
In 2013 there were 23,153 opioid overdose deaths -- 16,235 involving opioid painkillers, 8,260 involving heroin/opium, and at least 1,342 involving a combination of the two. However, opioid overdoses are seldom due to opioid use along; the majority are a result of mixing an opioid with some other drug. The best way to avoid opioid overdose is not taking opioids; the next best thing is to avoid drug mixing entirely. If you insist on mixing drugs in spite of the inherent dangers, then it is imperative to take extra safety precautions to not die when mixing drugs.<br />  These include:<br />


* Don't use alone
Narcan can either be injected or be administered in a nasal spray. In 2023, The US Food and Drug Administration made Narcan available to the general public as an over-the-counter drug to use as a nasal spray. <ref>https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-approves-first-over-counter-naloxone-nasal-spray</ref> It can be easily administered with little or no formal training. Although the drug could potentially save more lives if it were more widely distributed, bystanders often do not summon medical assistance due to fear of possible prosecution against them. Narcan only works on opioids, and does not harm an individual in the case of a non-opioid overdose. So, if there is any question as to what a person took, use Narcan.
* Limit the amount of drugs you have available
* Stick to less lethal combinations of drugs
* Use smaller amounts of each drug
* Use the least impairing drug first
* Have Narcan on hand
* When injecting drugs of unknown strength and purity (street heroin), start with a small "tester" shot to gauge the strength of the drug before injecting a full dose
* When using a drug or drug combination for the first time, start with a small dose to gauge your innate tolerance
* Make sure your friends (or at least someone) knows what drug combinations you have taken
* Have a plan in place in case something goes wrong
<br />  Narcan only works on opioids, but doesn't harm an individual in the case on non-opioid overdose. So if there's any question as to what a person took, use narcan; it can only help.<sup class="reference">[6]</sup><br /> <br />
=Waive Copays=
Many people who are prescribed Narcan (nearly 35%) don’t pick it up—presumably because they can’t afford the co-pay.<sup class="reference">[7]</sup><br />  Having insurers eliminate the co-pay is one strategy to help address that. [https://www.aetna.com/index.html?cid=ppc-700000001035216-National_Always%20On_Branded_Aetna_Exact-Aetna-aetna&s_dfa=1&gclid=Cj0KCQiA38jRBRCQARIsACEqIeuilyQ_mSIjuCUt394XAuPY7X7VLnJ16hmHFgFYPcLvvOwo4NUwmxkaAsEhEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds Aetna] is currently the first national payer to waive copays for Narcan for its fully-insured commercial members. This will "increase access and remove possible financial barriers to the lifesaving drug."<sup class="reference">[8]</sup><br /> <br />
=Legislation & Policy=
==Good Samaritan Laws==
People often hesitate to seek treatment or call medical assistance in fear of incarceration or other form of punishment. In August of 2015, the White House announced a treatment-based initiative with $2.5 million going toward a pilot program that will engage law enforcement officers and public health professional to collect data on the movement of heroin along the East coast, and to train first responders on when it is adequate to administer Naloxone.<sup class="reference">[9]</sup><br /> <br />  In 2006, New Mexico passed a [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/05/us/05drugs.html "Good Samaritan Law"] that "granted limited immunity from prosecution on simple possession chargers for people who dialed 911 to report a drug overdose". By 2015, 28 states in addition to the District of Columbia had passed similar laws.<br /> <br />  In Minnesota, a "Good Samaritan" law was passed to assure that people who call the police or emergency responders to help with an overdose situation will not face legal consequences for their involvement, use of, or possession of legal or illegal opioids. This removes a potential barrier--fear of arrest--that sometimes leads to help not being called and lives being lost to overdose.<sup class="reference">[10]</sup><br /> <br /> [http://www.ncsl.org/research/civil-and-criminal-justice/drug-overdose-immunity-good-samaritan-laws.aspx Drug Overdose Immunity and Good Samaritan Laws] for minimizing the fears of calling for help in the case of an overdose.<br /> <br />
==Increasing Awareness of Law==


* A [http://adai.uw.edu/pubs/infobriefs/ADAI-IB-2011-05.pdf University of Washington study] evaluating the initial results of Washington state’s Good Samaritan policy found in a survey that drug users who were aware of the law were 88 percent more likely to call 911 in the event of an overdose than before.<sup class="reference">[11]</sup>
= Key Information =
* After New York state passed its Good Samaritan law in 2011, for example, the Drug Policy Alliance printed 1 million [http://www.drugpolicy.org/sites/default/files/documents/DPA_911_GoodSam_Wallet_Card_v10_PRINTABLE.PDF cards] and [http://www.drugpolicy.org/sites/default/files/documents/DPA_911_Good_Samaritan_Flyer_EN_v3.pdf posters] that explained the law and offered basic instructions on how to initially respond to an overdose, and worked with various agencies to help distribute these materials to vulnerable populations.
==Federal Changes to Address Problem==
Various federal organizations came together to encourage good faith prescription of naloxone to ordinary citizens and the second was to encourage bystanders to become "Good Samaritans" by summoning emergency responders without fear of negative legal consequences.<br />
==State Law Passage==
By the end of 2016, all but 3 states, Kansas, Montana, and Wyoming, have passed laws to improve ordinary person naloxone access.<br /> <br />
==Pharmacists==
In California, The California State Board of Pharmacy passed a policy that allows pharmacists to give out Naloxone (Narcan) without a prescription in case of emergencies.<sup class="reference">[12]</sup><br />
=New in 2016: Improved Access to Nasal Narcan=
New Public Interest Pricing $37.50 per dose<br /> <div class="objectEmbed">[[file/view/Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf/572930093/Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf|[File:http://www.wikispaces.com/i/mime/32/application/pdf.png Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf]]]<div>[[file/view/Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf/572930093/Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf|Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf]]<br />


* [[file/detail/Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf|Details]]
Opioid overdose education and Naloxone distribution programs increase knowledge on how to effectively respond when someone is experiencing an overdose. Participation in the Naloxone distribution programs is linked to a reduction in overdose deaths and an increase in confidence when responding to overdose. <ref>https://www.countyhealthrankings.org/take-action-to-improve-health/what-works-for-health/strategies/naloxone-education-distribution-programs</ref> Research documents that communities that have programs aimed at training bystanders to respond to opioid overdoses have experienced a more rapid reduction in opioid overdose death rates than communities without these programs. <ref>https://www.countyhealthrankings.org/take-action-to-improve-health/what-works-for-health/strategies/naloxone-education-distribution-programs</ref>
* [[file/view/Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf/572930093/Press Release for Adapt Pharma and Public Interest Pricing.pdf|Download]]
* 230 KB
</div></div><br /> <br /> Free case of Narcan Nasal for any school. (Only 9 states allow as of Jan 2016).<br /> <div class="objectEmbed">[[file/view/Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf/572930069/Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf|[File:http://www.wikispaces.com/i/mime/32/application/pdf.png Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf]]]<div>[[file/view/Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf/572930069/Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf|Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf]]<br />  


* [[file/detail/Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf|Details]]
Those who are close to opioid users have greater knowledge about overdose and how to respond appropriately after they have completed training in naloxone administration compared to peers who learn via an information booklet. Current and former opioid users who complete overdose response training are as adept as medical experts in the identification of an overdose and are equally able to tell when Naloxone is appropriate. Opioid users who participate in only a brief 5-minute training or who have learned about Naloxone administration through social networks are able to respond appropriately to an overdose.
* [[file/view/Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf/572930069/Free Narcan Nasal Spray and Education for High Schools.pdf|Download]]
* 164 KB
</div></div><br /> <br />
=Law Enforcement Use of Naloxone=


* A 2016 report by the Police Executive Research Forum provides case examples of law enforcement naloxone programs instituted in Fayetteville (NC), Lummi Nation (WA), Virginia Beach (VA), Staten Island (NY), Camden County (CJ), Mongomery County (MD), and Hagerstown (MD) including descriptions of training, funding, administration and support.<sup class="reference">[13]</sup>
Training first responders to administer Naloxone may reduce time to overdose rescue, possibly decreasing overdose-related injury and death. Law enforcement officers who participate in Naloxone administration and overdose training report having increased knowledge and confidence in dealing with opioid overdose emergencies after the program is finished. <ref>https://www.countyhealthrankings.org/take-action-to-improve-health/what-works-for-health/strategies/naloxone-education-distribution-programs</ref>
<br />  


* [[EI%20-%20Librarians%20%26%20Access%20to%20Overdose%20Treatment|EI - Librarians & Access to Overdose Treatment]]The Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) maintains an online toolkit featuring resources and information on naloxone, including a section on liability and risk for law enforcement officers and their employers associated with naloxone administration.<sup class="reference">[14]</sup>
'''The Dangers of Dual Use'''
<br />
=Database of State Legislative Efforts=
This [http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/prevention-of-prescription-drug-overdose-and-abuse.aspx site] has many examples of policy efforts that have been attempted or passed.<br /> <br />
===Prevent Overdose strategies===
This [https://www.overdosepreventionstrategies.org/ link] is a resource that has put every state's strategy into an online resource hub. This gives users a free resource to see what is being enacted in other states and lets people compare and contrast. This will allow for communities to enter and see what works and what does not.<br /> <br /> [https://www.overdosepreventionstrategies.org/ Overdose Prevention Strategies]<br /> <br />
=Engaging Diverse Community Partners=
[[CP - Improve Access to Treatments that Prevent Overdose Deaths]]<br />
=Tools & Resources=
[[TR - Improve Access to Treatment that Prevent Overdose Deaths]]<br /> [http:///file/view/SAMHSA_Opioid_Overdose_Prevention_TOOLKIT.pdf/613626145/SAMHSA_Opioid_Overdose_Prevention_TOOLKIT.pdf SAMHSA- Opioid Overdose Prevention Toolkit] - In particular, sections Facts for Community Members and Information for Prescribers may be of special interest.<br />
=Scorecard Building=
[[PO%20-%20Enhance%20Access%20to%20Emergency%20Treatments%20to%20Minimize%20Overdose%20Deaths|Potential Objective Details]]<br /> [[PM - Improve Access to Treatment that Prevent Overdose Deaths|Potential Measures and Data Sources]]<br /> [[PA - Improve Access to Treatment that Prevent Overdose Deaths|Potential Actions and Partners]]<br />
=Resources to Investigate=
[[More%20RTI%20on%20Enhancing%20Access%20to%20Emergency%20Treatments|More RTI on Enhancing Access to Emergency Treatments]]<br /> <br /> '''PAGE MANAGER''': [insert name here]<br /> '''SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT''': [fill out table below]<br />
{| class="wiki_table"
| Reviewer<br />
| Date<br />
| Comments<br />
|-
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
|}
=Sources=


----
The extent of fatalities associated with opioid is well-documented. However, it is less understood that opioid overdoses are seldom due to opioid use alone. The majority of overdoses are a result of mixing an opioid with some other drug. The best way to avoid an opioid overdose is not taking opioids. It is also critical to increase awareness of the need to avoid knowingly mixing opioids with other drugs. Some safety precautions are listed below:


# Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Heroin and Prescription Painkillers: A Toolkit for Community Action. 2016.
*Don't use alone
# CACDA Administration of Narcan. 2017<br /> [http://www.cadca.org/resources/coalition-action-meriden-healthy-youth-coalition-mhyc-provides-life-saving-overdose]<br /> ent of your reference here.
*Limit the amount of drugs you have available
# 100 Million Healthier Lives City, Town-Wide, and Regional Efforts.<br /> [https://www.baltimorecountymd.gov/news/baltimorecountynow/Kamenetz_Announces_Significant_County_Substance_Abuse_Initiatives_]
*Stick to less lethal combinations of drugs
# 100 Million Healthier Lives City, Town-Wide, and Regional Efforts [https://www.baltimorecountymd.gov/news/baltimorecountynow/Kamenetz_Announces_Significant_County_Substance_Abuse_Initiatives_]
*Use smaller amounts of each drug
# 100 Million Healthier Lives City, Town-Wide, and Regional Efforts.
*Use the least impairing drug first 
# [http://www.rehabs.com/pro-talk-articles/the-ultimate-harm-reduction-guide-to-drug-mixing/]
*When injecting drugs of unknown strength and purity (street heroin), start with a small "tester" shot to gauge the strength of the drug before injecting a full dose
# [https://news.aetna.com/2017/12/aetna-announces-new-policies-improve-access-narcan-combat-overprescribing/]
*When using a drug or drug combination for the first time, start with a small dose to gauge your innate tolerance
# [https://news.aetna.com/2017/12/aetna-announces-new-policies-improve-access-narcan-combat-overprescribing/]
*Make sure your friends (or at least someone) knows what drug combinations you have taken
# [http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2015/08/good_samaritan_drug_laws_they_save_lives_and_more_states_should_pass_them.html]
*Have a plan in place in case something goes wrong
# [http://www.minnesotarecovery.org/files/FINAL_Good_Samaritan_Postcard.pdf]
*Have Narcan on hand
# [http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2015/08/good_samaritan_drug_laws_they_save_lives_and_more_states_should_pass_them.html]
 
# [http://www.pharmacy.ca.gov/publications/naloxone_media_release.pdf]
= Relevant Research =
# Police Executive Research Forum. 2016. Building Successful Partnerships between Law Enforcement and Public Health Agencies to Address Opioid Use. COPS Office Emerging Issues Forums. Washington, DC: Office of Community Oriented Policing Services. [https://ric-zai-inc.com/Publications/cops-p356-pub.pdf]
 
# [https://www.bjatraining.org/tools/naloxone/Liability-and-Risk]
* A study in Massachusetts found that cities that have Naloxone distribution programs have lower overdose death rates than those without a program. <ref>http://www.bmj.com/content/346/bmj.f174</ref>
</div>
 
*A University of Washington study evaluating the initial results of Washington state’s Good Samaritan policy found in a survey that drug users who were aware of the law were 88 percent more likely to call 911 in the event of an overdose than before.<ref>http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2015/08/good_samaritan_drug_laws_they_save_lives_and_more_states_should_pass_them.html</ref> <ref>http://adai.uw.edu/pubs/infobriefs/ADAI-IB-2011-05.pdf</ref>
 
*This article was published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine and is directed to physicians in Emergency Departments. It highlights successes that have been achieved in recent years and calls for specific patient-centered action by emergency physicians. <ref>https://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(19)30606-7/fulltext</ref>
 
= Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies =
 
In 2015, the White House announced a treatment-based initiative. The $2.5 million budget was allocated to a program that engaged law enforcement officers and public health professionals to collect data on the movement of heroin along the East coast and to train first responders on when it is adequate to administer Naloxone. <ref>http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2015/08/good_samaritan_drug_laws_they_save_lives_and_more_states_should_pass_them.html</ref> Various federal organizations have come together to encourage good faith prescription of Naloxone to ordinary citizens. They also encourage bystanders to become "Good Samaritans" by summoning emergency responders without fear of negative legal consequences.
 
State laws make it difficult for citizens to obtain prescriptions for injection Narcan, due to policies on third-party prescriptions and on prescriptions via standing orders. The third party-prescription law prohibits the prescription of drugs to someone other than the person who will receive them, while the standing order law prohibits the prescription of drugs to a person not personally examined by the prescribing physician. There are a variety of cases in which the complexity of Naloxone policies are advancing:
 
*The California State Board of Pharmacy passed a policy that allows pharmacists to give out Naloxone without a prescription in case of emergencies. <ref>https://nabp.pharmacy/news/news-releases/california-pharmacists-may-now-dispense-naloxone-without-prescription/</ref>
 
* In 2006, New Mexico passed a Good Samaritan Law that granted limited immunity from prosecution on simple possession charges for people who dialed 911 to report a drug overdose. Within ten years, 28 states in addition to the District of Columbia had passed similar laws to overcome hesitation to seek treatment or to call medical assistance, as a result of fear of incarceration or other forms of punishment
 
* In 2023, in Minnesota, a Good Samaritan law was passed to assure that people who call the police or emergency responders to help with an overdose situation will not face legal consequences for their involvement, use of, or possession of legal or illegal opioids. This removed a potential barrier --fear of arrest -- that sometimes leads to help not being called and lives being lost to overdose. <ref>https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/604A.01</ref>
 
*The National Conference of State Legislatures has many examples of policy efforts that have been attempted or passed, including Drug Overdose Immunity and Good Samaritan Laws. <ref>http://www.ncsl.org/research/civil-and-criminal-justice/drug-overdose-immunity-good-samaritan-laws.aspx</ref> <ref>http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/prevention-of-prescription-drug-overdose-and-abuse.aspx</ref>
 
= Available Tools and Resources =
 
*'''CDC''' provides a website titled "Reverse Overdose to Prevent Death." This has information on Naloxone and Good Samaritan laws. <ref>https://www.cdc.gov/opioids/overdoseprevention/reverse-od.html</ref>
 
* '''SAMHSA''' Overdose Prevention and Response: Toolkit. <ref>https://store.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/overdose-prevention-response-kit-pep23-03-00-001.pdf</ref>
 
*'''The Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA)''' maintains an online toolkit featuring resources and information on Naloxone, including a section on liability and risk for law enforcement officers and their employers. <ref>https://bjatta.bja.ojp.gov/tools/naloxone/Liability-and-Risk</ref>
 
*'''The National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators, Inc. (NADDI)''' provides a resource titled "Overdose and Prevention Strategies that has every state's strategy in an online resource hub. This gives users a free resource to see what is being enacted in other states and lets people compare and contrast. This allows communities to identify the most effective strategies for them to implement. <ref>https://www.overdosepreventionstrategies.org/</ref>
 
= Promising Practices =
 
*'''Aetna.''' Many people who are prescribed Narcan (nearly 35%) don’t pick it up because they can’t afford the co-pay.<ref>https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/aetna-launches-new-policies-to-combat-opioid-crisis/512866/</ref> Having insurers eliminate the co-pay is one strategy to help address that. Aetna was the first national payer to waive copays for Narcan for its fully insured commercial members. This improved access by eliminating potential financial barriers to the lifesaving drug. <ref>https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/aetna-launches-new-policies-to-combat-opioid-crisis/512866/</ref>
 
*'''Connecticut.''' Several communities have made it mandatory for first responders to receive overdose training. <ref>https://www.newstimes.com/local/article/More-responders-using-wonder-drug-Narcan-to-5925616.php</ref>
 
*'''New York.''' The Drug Policy Alliance printed 1 million cards and posters that explained the Good Samaritan Law and offered basic instructions on how to initially respond to an overdose and worked with various agencies to help distribute these materials to vulnerable populations.
 
*'''North Carolina.''' The NC Harm Reduction Coalition has given out 52,000 naloxone kits since 2013 through their statewide grassroots network that includes syringe exchange and Naloxone distribution, with more than 8,700 overdose reversals reported. <ref>https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2017/12/01/opioid-commission-almost-got-right-their-naloxone-recommendation-megan-mclemore-corey-davis-column/899812001/</ref>
 
*'''The Police Executive Research Forum''' provides case examples of law enforcement Naloxone programs instituted in Fayetteville (NC), Lummi Nation (WA), Virginia Beach (VA), Staten Island (NY), and Camden County, Montgomery County, and Hagerstown (MD). They include descriptions of training, funding, administration, and support. <ref>https://cops.usdoj.gov/RIC/Publications/cops-p356-pub.pdf</ref>
 
= <br/> Sources =
</div>
[[Category:SAFE-Full Spectrum Prevention]] [[Category:SAFE-Treatment and Recovery]]

Latest revision as of 07:28, 27 March 2024

Introductory Paragraph

Naloxone (Narcan) has the potential to be very beneficial in communities with a high opioid problem. Increasing community awareness about the power of Narcan to reverse overdose is a benefit unlike any other. Narcan is a prescription medicine that can reverse an opioid overdose or prevent it long enough for the person to receive adequate medical care. It blocks the opioid receptors in the brain to prevent breathing and heart rates from slowing to fatal levels. It has been effective in saving lives, giving people with addiction a chance to realize the depth of their problem and a chance to ask for help. [1] Narcan will allow victims of substance abuse to be more likely to survive an overdose when first responders are rightly prepared. Many states are working to pass laws that give police, first responders, and concerned family members the ability to carry and administer Narcan when called to a possible overdose situation.

Narcan can either be injected or be administered in a nasal spray. In 2023, The US Food and Drug Administration made Narcan available to the general public as an over-the-counter drug to use as a nasal spray. [2] It can be easily administered with little or no formal training. Although the drug could potentially save more lives if it were more widely distributed, bystanders often do not summon medical assistance due to fear of possible prosecution against them. Narcan only works on opioids, and does not harm an individual in the case of a non-opioid overdose. So, if there is any question as to what a person took, use Narcan.

Key Information

Opioid overdose education and Naloxone distribution programs increase knowledge on how to effectively respond when someone is experiencing an overdose. Participation in the Naloxone distribution programs is linked to a reduction in overdose deaths and an increase in confidence when responding to overdose. [3] Research documents that communities that have programs aimed at training bystanders to respond to opioid overdoses have experienced a more rapid reduction in opioid overdose death rates than communities without these programs. [4]

Those who are close to opioid users have greater knowledge about overdose and how to respond appropriately after they have completed training in naloxone administration compared to peers who learn via an information booklet. Current and former opioid users who complete overdose response training are as adept as medical experts in the identification of an overdose and are equally able to tell when Naloxone is appropriate. Opioid users who participate in only a brief 5-minute training or who have learned about Naloxone administration through social networks are able to respond appropriately to an overdose.

Training first responders to administer Naloxone may reduce time to overdose rescue, possibly decreasing overdose-related injury and death. Law enforcement officers who participate in Naloxone administration and overdose training report having increased knowledge and confidence in dealing with opioid overdose emergencies after the program is finished. [5]

The Dangers of Dual Use

The extent of fatalities associated with opioid is well-documented. However, it is less understood that opioid overdoses are seldom due to opioid use alone. The majority of overdoses are a result of mixing an opioid with some other drug. The best way to avoid an opioid overdose is not taking opioids. It is also critical to increase awareness of the need to avoid knowingly mixing opioids with other drugs. Some safety precautions are listed below:

  • Don't use alone
  • Limit the amount of drugs you have available
  • Stick to less lethal combinations of drugs
  • Use smaller amounts of each drug
  • Use the least impairing drug first
  • When injecting drugs of unknown strength and purity (street heroin), start with a small "tester" shot to gauge the strength of the drug before injecting a full dose
  • When using a drug or drug combination for the first time, start with a small dose to gauge your innate tolerance
  • Make sure your friends (or at least someone) knows what drug combinations you have taken
  • Have a plan in place in case something goes wrong
  • Have Narcan on hand

Relevant Research

  • A study in Massachusetts found that cities that have Naloxone distribution programs have lower overdose death rates than those without a program. [6]
  • A University of Washington study evaluating the initial results of Washington state’s Good Samaritan policy found in a survey that drug users who were aware of the law were 88 percent more likely to call 911 in the event of an overdose than before.[7] [8]
  • This article was published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine and is directed to physicians in Emergency Departments. It highlights successes that have been achieved in recent years and calls for specific patient-centered action by emergency physicians. [9]

Impactful Federal, State, and Local Policies

In 2015, the White House announced a treatment-based initiative. The $2.5 million budget was allocated to a program that engaged law enforcement officers and public health professionals to collect data on the movement of heroin along the East coast and to train first responders on when it is adequate to administer Naloxone. [10] Various federal organizations have come together to encourage good faith prescription of Naloxone to ordinary citizens. They also encourage bystanders to become "Good Samaritans" by summoning emergency responders without fear of negative legal consequences.

State laws make it difficult for citizens to obtain prescriptions for injection Narcan, due to policies on third-party prescriptions and on prescriptions via standing orders. The third party-prescription law prohibits the prescription of drugs to someone other than the person who will receive them, while the standing order law prohibits the prescription of drugs to a person not personally examined by the prescribing physician. There are a variety of cases in which the complexity of Naloxone policies are advancing:

  • The California State Board of Pharmacy passed a policy that allows pharmacists to give out Naloxone without a prescription in case of emergencies. [11]
  • In 2006, New Mexico passed a Good Samaritan Law that granted limited immunity from prosecution on simple possession charges for people who dialed 911 to report a drug overdose. Within ten years, 28 states in addition to the District of Columbia had passed similar laws to overcome hesitation to seek treatment or to call medical assistance, as a result of fear of incarceration or other forms of punishment
  • In 2023, in Minnesota, a Good Samaritan law was passed to assure that people who call the police or emergency responders to help with an overdose situation will not face legal consequences for their involvement, use of, or possession of legal or illegal opioids. This removed a potential barrier --fear of arrest -- that sometimes leads to help not being called and lives being lost to overdose. [12]
  • The National Conference of State Legislatures has many examples of policy efforts that have been attempted or passed, including Drug Overdose Immunity and Good Samaritan Laws. [13] [14]

Available Tools and Resources

  • CDC provides a website titled "Reverse Overdose to Prevent Death." This has information on Naloxone and Good Samaritan laws. [15]
  • SAMHSA Overdose Prevention and Response: Toolkit. [16]
  • The Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) maintains an online toolkit featuring resources and information on Naloxone, including a section on liability and risk for law enforcement officers and their employers. [17]
  • The National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators, Inc. (NADDI) provides a resource titled "Overdose and Prevention Strategies that has every state's strategy in an online resource hub. This gives users a free resource to see what is being enacted in other states and lets people compare and contrast. This allows communities to identify the most effective strategies for them to implement. [18]

Promising Practices

  • Aetna. Many people who are prescribed Narcan (nearly 35%) don’t pick it up because they can’t afford the co-pay.[19] Having insurers eliminate the co-pay is one strategy to help address that. Aetna was the first national payer to waive copays for Narcan for its fully insured commercial members. This improved access by eliminating potential financial barriers to the lifesaving drug. [20]
  • Connecticut. Several communities have made it mandatory for first responders to receive overdose training. [21]
  • New York. The Drug Policy Alliance printed 1 million cards and posters that explained the Good Samaritan Law and offered basic instructions on how to initially respond to an overdose and worked with various agencies to help distribute these materials to vulnerable populations.
  • North Carolina. The NC Harm Reduction Coalition has given out 52,000 naloxone kits since 2013 through their statewide grassroots network that includes syringe exchange and Naloxone distribution, with more than 8,700 overdose reversals reported. [22]
  • The Police Executive Research Forum provides case examples of law enforcement Naloxone programs instituted in Fayetteville (NC), Lummi Nation (WA), Virginia Beach (VA), Staten Island (NY), and Camden County, Montgomery County, and Hagerstown (MD). They include descriptions of training, funding, administration, and support. [23]


Sources

  1. Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation. Heroin and Prescription Painkillers: A Toolkit for Community Action. 2016.
  2. https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/fda-approves-first-over-counter-naloxone-nasal-spray
  3. https://www.countyhealthrankings.org/take-action-to-improve-health/what-works-for-health/strategies/naloxone-education-distribution-programs
  4. https://www.countyhealthrankings.org/take-action-to-improve-health/what-works-for-health/strategies/naloxone-education-distribution-programs
  5. https://www.countyhealthrankings.org/take-action-to-improve-health/what-works-for-health/strategies/naloxone-education-distribution-programs
  6. http://www.bmj.com/content/346/bmj.f174
  7. http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2015/08/good_samaritan_drug_laws_they_save_lives_and_more_states_should_pass_them.html
  8. http://adai.uw.edu/pubs/infobriefs/ADAI-IB-2011-05.pdf
  9. https://www.annemergmed.com/article/S0196-0644(19)30606-7/fulltext
  10. http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/crime/2015/08/good_samaritan_drug_laws_they_save_lives_and_more_states_should_pass_them.html
  11. https://nabp.pharmacy/news/news-releases/california-pharmacists-may-now-dispense-naloxone-without-prescription/
  12. https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/604A.01
  13. http://www.ncsl.org/research/civil-and-criminal-justice/drug-overdose-immunity-good-samaritan-laws.aspx
  14. http://www.ncsl.org/research/health/prevention-of-prescription-drug-overdose-and-abuse.aspx
  15. https://www.cdc.gov/opioids/overdoseprevention/reverse-od.html
  16. https://store.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/overdose-prevention-response-kit-pep23-03-00-001.pdf
  17. https://bjatta.bja.ojp.gov/tools/naloxone/Liability-and-Risk
  18. https://www.overdosepreventionstrategies.org/
  19. https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/aetna-launches-new-policies-to-combat-opioid-crisis/512866/
  20. https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/aetna-launches-new-policies-to-combat-opioid-crisis/512866/
  21. https://www.newstimes.com/local/article/More-responders-using-wonder-drug-Narcan-to-5925616.php
  22. https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2017/12/01/opioid-commission-almost-got-right-their-naloxone-recommendation-megan-mclemore-corey-davis-column/899812001/
  23. https://cops.usdoj.gov/RIC/Publications/cops-p356-pub.pdf