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pinto

(106,886 posts)
Fri Oct 11, 2013, 04:34 PM Oct 2013

California Comprehensive Overdose Treatment Protection Signed by Governor

Source: Harm Reduction Coalition

GOVERNOR SIGNS COMPREHENSIVE OVERDOSE TREATMENT PROTECTION

SACRAMENTO, CA -- Governor Brown signed AB 635, authored by Assemblymember Tom Ammiano, to decrease overdose fatalities in California by increasing the distribution of an opioid overdose antidote, naloxone. Drug overdoses are now the leading cause of accidental death in the United States, surpassing motor vehicle crash deaths.

This legislation protects doctors and other licensed health professionals who prescribe and distribute naloxone to those who need it, including at-risk illicit or prescription drug users and potential bystanders to an overdose. It also clarifies that treatment providers and other non-medical personnel are able to distribute the prescription antidote under a doctor’s “standing orders”. This practice translates into significant cost savings for individuals and taxpayers. Additionally, the bill will encourage health care providers to begin prescribing naloxone to patients on chronic opioid pain medications in order to address the prescription drug overdose epidemic.

Harm Reduction Coalition (HRC), bill co-sponsor with the California Society of Addiction Medicine, applauded the legislature. "In California, overdose prevention programs have operated in a handful of cities and counties, but have had limited reach in terms of addressing the overdose issue statewide because of potential legal concerns, " explained HRC California Director, Hilary McQuie. "We applaud Governor Brown for joining this bipartisan consensus to protect the programs already operating, remove the obstacles for those that want to start, and clarify that prescribers may employ the 'best practice' of prescribing naloxone to those at greatest risk for overdose."

Overdose prevention programs distribute the life-saving drug naloxone (also known as Narcan®), which reverses an opioid overdose from drugs like heroin, oxycodone, morphine, or methadone by restoring an overdosing person's breathing and heart rate. The state's longest-running overdose prevention program, the Drug Overdose Prevention and Education Project (DOPE) in San Francisco, a program of the Harm Reduction Coalition, has provided over 3600 take-home naloxone prescriptions since 2003 in collaboration with the San Francisco Department of Public Health, with over 1000 lives saved. In addition, clinicians at SFDPH public health clinics started co-prescribing naloxone with prescription opioids this year to their patients.

According to a Centers for Disease Control report, overdose prevention programs distributing naloxone in the US have trained over 50,000 laypersons to revive someone during an overdose to date, resulting in over 10,000 overdose reversals using naloxone. However, many licensed health care practitioners reported fear of prescribing take-home opioid antagonists like naloxone to their patients because of potential civil and criminal liability. This new law was designed to allay those fears.


Read more: http://harmreduction.org/overdose-prevention/caoverdoseprev/

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California Comprehensive Overdose Treatment Protection Signed by Governor (Original Post) pinto Oct 2013 OP
Democratic Governor Jerry Brown is the best and most progressive governor in the country. LaPera Oct 2013 #1
And he's got the support of a Dem legislature. pinto Oct 2013 #2
Hey well thanks! CountAllVotes Oct 2013 #7
I think this can also be used to treat addiction wercal Oct 2013 #3
We're seeing a significant increase in Rx opiates being used via injection. pinto Oct 2013 #4
Interesting wercal Oct 2013 #5
Here in CA "doctor shopping" has come under increased investigation. pinto Oct 2013 #6

LaPera

(6,486 posts)
1. Democratic Governor Jerry Brown is the best and most progressive governor in the country.
Fri Oct 11, 2013, 04:44 PM
Oct 2013

Just like it's people (especially the northern CA coastal counties in the state)

CountAllVotes

(20,875 posts)
7. Hey well thanks!
Fri Oct 11, 2013, 09:10 PM
Oct 2013

Jerry Brown is an old San Franciscan.

I first saw him in 1978 while living in the City and working near City Hall.

He was a fine man to view indeed in his very sharp pin stripe suit.

He was running for President at that time.

I'd vote for him NOW if he were to run for President.

A fine man and an absolute fine example of what a REAL Democrat is!

Jerry Brown!!!

wercal

(1,370 posts)
3. I think this can also be used to treat addiction
Fri Oct 11, 2013, 04:53 PM
Oct 2013

BTW, a quick editorial - Heroin is making a comeback...stay the hell away from heroin.

pinto

(106,886 posts)
4. We're seeing a significant increase in Rx opiates being used via injection.
Fri Oct 11, 2013, 05:03 PM
Oct 2013

(I work with a local syringe exchange program). And a significant increase in overdose events. Some are apparently intentional suicide attempts and many are apparently inadvertent, i.e. unintentional. The trend away from heroin to Rx opiates, which are often much stronger than highly cut street heroin, seems to be a factor in recent OD's.

But, yeah, opiate use is up across the board in our experience.

wercal

(1,370 posts)
5. Interesting
Fri Oct 11, 2013, 05:15 PM
Oct 2013

I've seen stories about states (Ohio in particular) that are cracking down on doctors who are too loose with their prescriptions pads, and making Rx harder to find...making Rx more expensive than heroin, and causing people to try heroin.

Other stories describe how a teenager might start out with pills at parties, never thinking they would try heroin (because that is seen as being a 'junkie')...but they get addicted on pills...and eventually try heroin to save money.

If you google 'suburbs heroin' or something like that, you will find stories with stats that show heroin is making a comeback in a lot of large cities...especially in the Midwest, where it is smuggled on trains from Mexico, and can be very cheap.

pinto

(106,886 posts)
6. Here in CA "doctor shopping" has come under increased investigation.
Fri Oct 11, 2013, 05:20 PM
Oct 2013

From both ends of the equation - prescibers and scrip recipients.

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