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  • 标题:Expanded Access to Naloxone Among Firefighters, Police Officers, and Emergency Medical Technicians in Massachusetts
  • 本地全文:下载
  • 作者:Corey S. Davis ; Sarah Ruiz ; Patrick Glynn
  • 期刊名称:American journal of public health
  • 印刷版ISSN:0090-0036
  • 出版年度:2014
  • 卷号:104
  • 期号:8
  • 页码:e7-e9
  • DOI:10.2105/AJPH.2014.302062
  • 语种:English
  • 出版社:American Public Health Association
  • 摘要:Naloxone is a medication that reverses respiratory depression from opioid overdose if given in time. Paramedics routinely administer naloxone to opioid overdose victims in the prehospital setting, and many states are moving to increase access to the medication. Several jurisdictions have expanded naloxone administration authority to nonparamedic first responders, and others are considering that step. We report here on policy change in Massachusetts, where several communities have equipped emergency medical technicians, law enforcement officers, and firefighters with naloxone. Fatal poisonings, more than 90% of which are drug overdoses, have increased by nearly 600% in the past 3 decades to become the leading cause of injury death in the United States. 1 This rise has been driven largely by opioid analgesic medications, which now account for more overdose deaths than heroin and cocaine combined. 2 Although first responders are not always contacted in time to reverse overdose, emergency department encounters associated with opioids and other sedatives have increased markedly over the past decade. 3 To address this epidemic, many states are moving to increase community access to the opioid antagonist naloxone, which can reverse opioid overdose if administered in time. 4,5 Nearly 200 community-based overdose prevention programs dispensed naloxone as of 2010, and participants reported reversing more than 10 000 overdoses. 6 In Massachusetts, communities participating in a community naloxone access program had lower opioid overdose death rates than those that did not, strongly suggesting that increased access to naloxone can reduce fatal opioid overdose. 7 Naloxone is the standard medication for reversing opioid overdose, and is routinely administered by paramedics for that purpose. Although paramedics typically administer naloxone intramuscularly (IM) or intraveneously (IV), it can also be administered intranasally (IN) via a needleless atomizer. IN administration of naloxone has been shown to be similarly effective as IV administration in the prehospital setting, 8–10 and in one study, IN naloxone administration was faster, better accepted, and perceived to be safer than IV administration. 11 In many areas, the first emergency personnel to respond to overdose calls are not paramedics but law enforcement officers, firefighters, and emergency medical technicians (EMTs; medical first responders who have a lower level of training than paramedics). The National Drug Control Strategy has called for equipping first responders to recognize and manage overdoses since 2010, and the Office of National Drug Control Policy has stated that naloxone “should be in the patrol cars of every law enforcement professional across the nation.” 12 Although these first responders in most states are not authorized to administer naloxone, this is rapidly changing; in 2013, 5 states changed law or policy to permit EMTs to administer naloxone, bringing the total up to 13 states. 13 Access to emergency prehospital care, including the provision of naloxone, may be an important piece in the overdose prevention puzzle. Nationwide, EMTs outnumber paramedics by approximately 3-to-1, and law enforcement officers are even more numerous. 14 In rural areas, EMTs may be the only medical first responders, and hospital transport times can be long. 15 A study in one large county demonstrated that EMT nasal naloxone administration could reduce time to naloxone delivery by between 5.7 and 10.2 minutes. 16 In tiered EMS departments with high overdose call volume, efficiencies may be created by dispatching EMTs instead of paramedics to overdose calls, reducing response time, and making paramedics available to respond to emergencies that require a higher level of skill and training. 16,17 We provide an overview of policy change in 3 communities in Massachusetts that expanded naloxone access to firefighters, EMTs, and police officers, and offer some brief thoughts on what this change might mean for other jurisdictions.
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