Project Narcan: BPD officers equipped with life-saving rescue drug

Similar documents
OHIO S OPIOID DRUG OVERDOSE EPIDEMIC: CONTRIBUTING FACTORS AND ONGOING PREVENTION EFFORTS

Anyone Can Become Addicted. Anyone.

Understanding the Opiate Epidemic

HEALTHCARE AND THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC DAN MUSE, MD SIGNATURE HEALTHCARE-BROCKTON HOSPITAL

The Unseen Consequences of Prescription Drug Abuse. Stephen Loyd, M.D.

Campus Narcan Project OPIOID OVERDOSE FIRST RESPONDER TRAINING

Orange County Heroin Task Force Implementation Update. George Ralls M.D. Director of Health & Public Safety Orange County Government

SUBJECT: Opioid Overdose and Intranasal Naloxone Training for Law Enforcement: Train the Trainer Session: Queens County October 17, 2014

some things you should know about opioids before starting a prescription an informational booklet for opioid pain treatment

NALOXONE LEARNING ABOUT NALOXONE COULD SAVE A LIFE

NALOXONE RISK ASSESSMENT

Otterbein Police Department. Opioid Addition Awareness

Opioid Prescription and Illicit Drug Overdoses: On the Rise

Opioid Addiction Statistics

Let s Talk About. Pain Medicines. wisconsin. health literacy. A division of Wisconsin Literacy, Inc.

Opioid Overdose Prevention for Law Enforcement and First Responders. Sponsored by the NC Office of EMS

Law Enforcement Naloxone Training Florida Department of Children and Families. Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health

MANAGING THE COSTS OF THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC IN WISCONSIN. State Senator Alberta Darling

Prescription Drug Abuse Task Force Rx Report Card

COMBATING THE OPIATE CRISIS IN OHIO THROUGH COMPREHENSIVE RESPONSE 2018 HOUSING OHIO CONFERENCE APRIL 9 TH, Objectives: Key Terms

The Meaning of the November Ballot Initiative to Legalize Recreational Marijuana

New Hampshire, Long Grappling with Substance Abuse Issues, Struggles to Combat Opioid Addiction

Heroin What You Need to Know

mcmillenhealth.org Linda Hathaway, C.F.C.S.

Patient and Family Agreement on Opioids

Opioid Harm Reduction

Report on Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution, Year 1

National Council on Patient Information and Education

Prescription for Progress Study conducted by the Siena College Research Institute April 10 - May 4, Stakeholders - MOE +/- 4.

Good Samaritan. State with this law in place: New Mexico, Washington, New York, Connecticut, Illinois (to be enforced June 1, 2012)

Mike s Blog School of Government, UNC-Chapel Hill

White Paper on. Prescription Drug Abuse

Opioids 101. Washington Prevention Summit. Alison Newman, MPH November 6, 2018

Welcome to the Opioid Overdose Prevention Project

Naloxone Opioid Rescue Kits. Aaron Kochar, JD

Overdose Prevention: Empowering School Personnel & Families

CLEVELAND COUNTY MAY 8, 2018 PAGE 1

Opioid Abuse. in Rural Minnesota. County Farm Bureau Resource Guide

Overdose. Everything you need to know. Includes free DVD!

PUBLIC HEALTH The Opioid Epidemic in Colorado

Fentanyl and Synthetic Opioids- Awareness and the Enforcement Pillar. July-16-18

Braintree Public Schools

50 % They don t just get drunk every month, they get drunk and/or use drugs. NOT MY KID NOT MY PRACTICE. College Headline 4/2/2013. Robert M.

<ctrl> <click> Here to the start the sound.

HOPE Agenda. Heroin, Opioid Prevention & Education WISCONSIN STATE REPRESENTATIVE JOHN NYGREN ASSEMBLY DISTRICT 89

MODUS OPERANDI FENTANYL. Control No.: P-693/

Opioid Abuse in Iowa Rx to Heroin. Iowa Governor s Office of Drug Control Policy January 2016

A Conversation on Fentanyl. School District 22 VERNON

The Partnership of Law Enforcement & Public Health Care 2014 AKA: The Community Policing of Public Health

Recognizing Narcotic Abuse and Addiction and Helping Those With It

Overdose Prevention, Recognition & Response Education Train-the-Trainer

C.A.A.R.E. WCPA/WPLF 2016 Winter Conference 4/5/2018. Greenfield Prior to C.A.A.R.E. Cops Assisting Addiction Recovery. Greenfield Police Department

Do your Part Be the Solution

Rash of fatal overdoses in Montreal could be linked to fentanyl

Calvert County Health Department Overdose Education and Naloxone Training

Addressing the Opioid Epidemic through a Public Health Lens

Opioids and Overdose 2017

THE MEDICINE ABUSE PROJECT:

BROCKTON AREA S OPIOID OVERDOSE PREVENTION TRAINING

OHIO S PRESCRIPTION DRUG OVERDOSE EPIDEMIC:

Heroin. Brain Research Institute, UCLA Alison Taylor

Top 10 narcotic pain pills

The Opioid Epidemic and its Cost on Society and the Economy

Naloxone HCI 4 mg/0.1. nostril. Repeat after 3 minutes if minimal or no

SULLIVAN COUNTY Drug Abuse Prevention Task Force

October 20, 2016 Scott K. Proescholdbell, MPH. Opioid Overdose and North Carolina s Public Health and Prevention Strategies

Prescription Opioid Painkiller Public Opinion Poll

Potential Solutions to Epidemic Substance Abuse in US and Europe

COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO. Opioid Update

4/10/2016. Legal & Policy Approaches to Reducing Opioid Poisonings. Overview. Background. Health Directors Legal Conference April 19, 2016

PREVENTION. Carroll County Health Department. Bureau of Prevention, Wellness and Recovery

EXPERT PANEL AND FIELD PARTICIPANTS BELIEVE

SIGNATURE OF COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR OR CHIEF ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICER

TO YOUR PHARMACIST TOOLKIT. A Guide to Help Utah Pharmacists Talk to Customers About Prescription Opioids

Aniston's 'Cake' shines a light on Rx drug abuse epidemic

Unintentional Drug Overdose Data Review

Strategies to Manage The Opioid Crisis

Ingham County Opioid Surveillance

OPIOIDS: THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND EVERYTHING IN-BETWEEN

REVERSING THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC: STRATEGIES TO SAVE LIVES

Opioids: Public Health Crisis Local Solutions: National Epidemic

Treatment Issues: The Opiate Crisis Among Us

Prescription Drug Take-Back Program Q s and A s

Prescription Opioids

Buprenorphine Patient Education

Resist the Opioid Pendulum: Understanding Opioids and Pain, and how they relate to Addiction

City of Martinsburg Fire and Police Department Overdose Response Strategies Past-Present-Future

OVERDOSE IN UTAH PREVENTION AND RESPONSE. Meghan Balough, MPH Heather Bush, B.S. Suicide Conference October 6, 2017

The Impact of the Opioid Epidemic on Women: Sources and Solutions

The Population is Abusing Drugs, but are Drugs Abusing Insurance?

PREVENTING OPIATE OVERDOSES IN SCHOOLS. Head 2 Toe 2017 April 20, 2017 Winona Stoltzfus BSN, MD, School Health Officer and Acting RHO SE Region

Opioids and Heroin in Snohomish County. Marijuana and Opioid Prevention Training May 2018

Opioid Overdose in Oregon Report to the Legislature

How to empower your child against underage drinking

Grand Rapids Police Department

Mayors Opioid Summit PATTERNS AND TRENDS OF THE OPIOID EPIDEMIC IN BROWARD COUNTY TYPES OF OPIOIDS DEFINITION OF OPIOID. Pill Press from China

2017 Jackson County Drug -Related Data Report. Heroin and Opioid Task Force Data Committee

OPIOIDS. Questions about opioids, and the Answers that may SURPRISE YOU. A booklet for people who may benefit from reducing or stopping their opioid

Transcription:

From: Kelli Williams, Chief Communications Officer City of Bartlesville Date: Oct. 24, 2017 For release: Immediate Project Narcan: BPD officers equipped with life-saving rescue drug By Kelli Williams City of Bartlesville Unintentional opioid drug poisoning has reached epidemic proportions in the U.S., with thousands of Americans dying from overdose each year. Combined with methamphetamine, the drugs were to blame for 899 deaths in Oklahoma in 2016 alone, according to the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics. Thirteen of those deaths were in Washington County. In an effort to help stop the death toll from climbing, all Bartlesville Police Department officers were recently issued naloxone kits a life-saving rescue drug that voids the effects of opioid-based drugs in the body. Better known by the brand name Narcan, the drug has proven to be safe and easy to administer, and is responsible for saving countless lives, Tulsa Police Department Officer Anthony First told BPD supervisors during a Narcan training class held earlier this month. First, a Tulsa Police Department Special Operations Team paramedic, medical support and training officer, provided the training prior to the issuance of Narcan to BPD officers. How it works What Narcan does is just void out the effects of the opioid. It doesn t do anything else to you, First said. It goes into the bloodstream and voids out the opioid, which makes their breathing pick up again. And that s what s going to save their life. Opioid-based drugs include codeine, fentanyl, hydrocodone, methadone, heroin, morphine and oxycodone. According to First, growth in the use of the painkiller fentanyl

has proven to be the game changer in causing the number of deaths due to opioid-based drugs to skyrocket is the U.S. including in Oklahoma. The drugs We love our pills in Oklahoma, First said. We re No. 5 in the country for the number of pills that are prescribed. And of course we ve had heroin around for a while, but heroin is (only) about 15-20 percent pure. It s just not that good. Well, enter fentanyl. Fentanyl entered our market about two years or so ago. On the east coast and other parts of the country it s absolutely brutal, and it s getting that bad in Oklahoma. First said that while all opioid-based drugs are powerful, fentanyl is in a class by itself. If you imagine morphine being a One, your oxycontins and hydrocodones are maybe about five times as powerful, he said. They re not meant to be super powerful, they re meant to just make some pain go away. Fentanyl, which is 100 percent pure, and this is what we re seeing on the streets, is 100 times more powerful than morphine. So you can see that when folks use this, they re going down immediately. The numbers: Oklahoma First said the number of overdoses due to fentanyl is growing everywhere, prompting Oklahoma to start offering equipping law enforcement with Narcan in 2014. To give you some idea of how bad our overdose problem is mainly because of fentanyl there are parts of the country where agencies that used to have one or two a month now are now having 10 to 20 a day, he said. We lose two people a day in Oklahoma (to opioid drugs). We have more people die in Oklahoma due to (opioids) than we do car crashes. And while many of these overdoses involve people who use the drugs illegally, they re not the only ones, First said. It s not just people who are using drugs recreationally, illegally, he said. It s also kids who get in their parents medicine cabinets, and older folks who mix up their medications. The numbers: Washington County In Washington County, more than 800 overdoses have been reported in the last four years, according to the Washington County Wellness Initiative, a local non-profit agency

that has partnered with the Cherokee Nation to work toward reducing prescription drug abuse in Washington County. According to WCWI, 71 people died from accidental overdose in Washington County between 2007 and 2015. Fifty of those involved prescription drugs and 42 involved prescription painkillers. Between 2012 and 2016, Jane Phillips Medical Center reported 830 overdoses, and 171 overdoses were reported by JPMC in 2016, according to WCWI records. We are seeing more deaths locally from opioid drug use, said BPD Detective Jim Warring, who works with the WCWI on drug-related education. We have heroin on the east coast filtering this way, and Mexican drug cartels are getting into the poppy business. These drugs are here now and are trending toward an even larger presence in the future. Unfortunately, this is a problem that is probably going to get worse before it gets better. Police Chief Tom Holland said the decision to issue Narcan to BPD officers was an easy one. The Bartlesville Police Department joins a long list of law enforcement agencies in Oklahoma that are now issuing Narcan to their officers, Holland said. I m sure we all wish this wasn t necessary, but the fact is these drugs are killing people. And if there is something the police department can do to help stop that, we are more than willing to do it. Statewide response In fact, 64 percent of all law enforcement officers in Oklahoma are currently able to administer the rescue drug. According to First, Narcan has been deployed by law enforcement officers across the state 108 times since it began to be used in 2014, with 88 reversals. In Tulsa, Narcan has been used approximately 40 times with 34 reversals, he said. And that s just law enforcement, he said. Many of these saves are made by family members, he said. Narcan is available at most pharmacies and does not require a prescription. The cost of a Narcan kit, when purchased retail, is approximately $50. Narcan kits for Oklahoma officers and other first responders are funded and provided by the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services. The problem

First acknowledges some agencies in the U.S. are having a problem paying for the amount of Narcan that is needed, citing costs in Florida, Ohio and Michigan as upwards of $200 per dose. And they re using it ten to twenty times a day, First said. So you can see what it s doing to their budgets. It s so bad, at least two cities have tried to pass municipal ordinances saying that if (law enforcement) has to revive you more than two or three times, you re done. Fortunately, none of those have passed, he said. First also addressed a sentiment in some communities of reluctance to offer Narcan because it is felt the drug makes the problem worse. I get that, First said. The problem is massive. It s too big for anyone in this room to fix. But what we can affect is what s happening right in front of us what s happening in the living room we re standing in when a mom finds her kid not breathing. Or what happens when we go to a high school and find a student, maybe a kid of one of our fellow officers, not breathing. At the end of the day, if it was your kid, how many times would you do it? Would you have a cut-off number? If it was your mom or dad, would you get to number six and say, You know what? We re just making the problem worse. I m not going to do it anymore. All these folks are someone s kids, they re someone s mom, someone s dad. The effects According to First, Narcan takes about 30 seconds to administer. One dose of Narcan is four milligrams, and while one dose generally revives the patient, sometimes two doses are required. (BPD officers are equipped with two doses.) If that doesn t do anything whatsoever, chances are it was not opiate-based, First said. Drugs that can prompt a similar effect of an opioid-based overdose include alcohol, Xanax and methamphetamine. Narcan will not revive those patients, he said. The drug is administered through the nose and is good for only about 60 minutes. Chest compressions may be necessary if there is no pulse, First said. If it s an (opioid-based) problem, you should see them start to recover in about a minute or so, he said. Their breathing will improve, their skin will look a little better. They

may or may not awaken, that depends on what (drugs) they ve got in them. But they will improve and get out of that life-threatening situation within about a minute or so. Because the effects of Narcan wear off within an hour or so, overdose victims should receive medical care even after Narcan is given, First said. BPD officers administering Narcan will remain with the patient until medical help arrives. Good Samaritan Law Law enforcement officers in Oklahoma are permitted to administer the life-saving drug under the Good Samaritan Law, which, as of Nov. 1, now includes protection specific to the administration of naloxone (Narcan). We re grateful to our legislators for adding this extra layer of protection for our officers, said City of Bartlesville Administrative Services Director Mike Bailey. We were always covered under the Good Samaritan Law, but this addition goes a little further and specifically protects law enforcement in administering naloxone, or Narcan. Project: Save lives BPD Patrol Capt. Rocky Bevard said that while law enforcement will continue in their efforts to combat drug trafficking and other serious crimes, the Narcan project is purely a life-saving effort and should not be confused with drug enforcement. This is not an enforcement issue, he said. We want everyone, no matter who it is, to feel comfortable approaching a Bartlesville police officer and asking for help. According to First, while Narcan can save the life of a child or someone accidentally exposed to opioid drugs, it can also offer a second chance to those who use the drugs illegally. If we can keep that person alive long enough to get to that nine-year mark, when most people are able to get clean from an opioid-based problem, we can get them back to their families we can get them back to their friends, to their jobs and their schools, he said. It s a win-win for everyone. -30-