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OD Reversal Drug Now Available To Every U.S. High School Free Of Charge

Maven

Southern Charm
Jack Daniels Straight Up M.I.L.F. Southern Comfort Anarchist Bitch Hotboxed
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Advocates say this is another important step toward preventing fatal opioid overdoses.

Any high school in the U.S. that wants to carry an emergency opioid overdose reversal kit will now be able to get one free of charge, thanks to a new initiative announced Monday by the Clinton Foundation and the drug's manufacturer.

Adapt Pharma, manufacturers of a nasal-spray form of naloxone, also known as Narcan, has partnered with the Clinton Health Matters Initiative to further expand access to the life-saving drug, the two groups said at the final day of the Clinton Health Matters Initiative Activation Summit. Naloxone is nonaddictive, nontoxic and easy to administer, especially through nasal application. It reverses the effects of an opioid overdose by essentially blocking the opioid receptors that heroin and many prescription painkillers target.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a nasal-spray version of naloxone in November, though it had previously been gaining popularity among first responders and advocacy groups as a first line of defense to prevent surging opioid overdose deaths across the nation.

"We are pleased to encourage public-private collaborations expanding access to naloxone," Rain Henderson, CEO of Clinton Health Matters Initiative, said in a press release. "We are hopeful this effort will facilitate a dialogue amongst students, educators, health professionals, and families about the risks of opioid overdose and ensure naloxone is available in schools that decide to take steps to address opioid overdose emergencies."

In addition to helping schools obtain naloxone, Adapt Pharma also announced that it had given a grant to the National Association of School Nurses to support opioid overdose education.

"We understand the crucial role schools can play to change the course of the opioid overdose epidemic by working with students and families. We also want every high school in the country to be prepared for an opioid emergency by having access to a carton of Narcan Nasal Spray at no cost," Adapt Pharma CEO Seamus Mulligan said in a press release. "We look forward to working with our partners to implement these initiatives which build on the significant progress being made by legislators and community groups."

A carton of Adapt's Narcan Nasal Spray typically contains two devices, each capable of delivering one dose, at the cost of $75 total. In November, Adapt announced that it was coordinating with the Clinton Foundation to make naloxone less expensive, following significant cost increases by other manufacturers over the previous year.

Opioid abuse has been a growing problem among younger Americans in recent years, with many high school users starting with prescription pills before transitioning to heroin.

Robert Childs, executive director for the North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition and an advocate for naloxone and other less punitive approaches to drug dependence, hailed the latest effort as a step in the right direction.

"By placing the opioid overdose reversal medicine naloxone at the site of potential overdoses in high schools, the designated school responder can reverse a opioid-based overdose at the scene, decreasing the chances of death and brain damage from respiratory failure," he said.

Childs added that naloxone was only one way to decrease overdose deaths among young people, and suggested that policymakers also enact 911 good Samaritan policies at the state level, as well as in colleges and schools, to offer amnesty to anyone who reports a drug overdose.

He also suggested that lawmakers could take broader steps to make it easier for individuals who use drugs, as well as their loved ones, to get hold of naloxone, and to expand affordable access to methadone and buprenorphine, a medication used to treat opiate dependence.

While pharmacies in some states and cities have recently made it easier to obtain naloxone without a prescription, many advocates say it's still too difficult for many people to get the drug.
 
So can we please legalize opiods? Also, I'd kill a motherfucker for hitting me with naloxone.
even if you were already dead?
 
I wasn't aware that opioid overdose fatalities on school grounds was a thing.

Also, anyone know why narcan of some form or another has not become an opioid addiction treatment?

There is buprenorphine and naltrexone pills and a long term one they place under the skin. Kind of acts like narcan.
If you have a opiate addiction (heroin) and they give you narcan you are instantly SICKER then you will ever feel in your life. You will shit yourself vomit, feel pain, sweat, freeze etc all at once.
This drug isn't saving lives everytime they use it. Some are just in a deep nod but they use this anyway to reverse it.
Anyone in NY NJ gets picked up by medics that are unconscious gets this to make ure there not overdosed even if there not junkies but no way to tell if there unconscious.
 
After applying naloxone, you have to repeat it every 20-30 min. Should do a doc/nurse in a hospital at best.
Most junks are shouting 'fuuuck' and running away, because turkey. They reload a fix and that's it.
Our streetworkers aren't allowed to have this stuff, too much risk.

Oh it works the first time if given by injection. They have that nasal stuff out now so it must be a smaller dose or need to dose more frequently.
 
The shit is nasty. Precipitated withdrawal is 1000 times worse than anything. I've done it accidentally with suboxone and you feel like you're going to fucking die
I wont let u die, bru. I,ll go futtin batgirl on yer teats if need be. sorry for the pain I WILL cause you

love is like that
 
I dare you to take suboxone after morphine and share your experience
i never played those games but i sure as fuck rule at chicken=

i wouldn't ha taken that to ha to be fucked back to life/my bru had to "revive" my junky nephew with that shit last fall. life goes on. that,s the shit of it
 
Don't really do it. You'd probably die. Horribly.
thank you for taking it back


now STARTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT fuckingggggggggggggggggggg
 
Also, anyone know why narcan of some form or another has not become an opioid addiction treatment?

That's an other game. Narcan is for life threatening overdoses only. Some medics, like subutex here, have this stuff as one of it's ingredients though in small amounts.
There are several medics for opiate addiction treatment (methadone, codeine, subutex, morphine....), but you'll stay an addict. Pro: you get your stuff legally from a doc/no dopesick anymore. Con: The real stuff is mostly better.
If you're able to kick the habit, depends on thousands of personally circumstances of the patient. There's no pill against addiction, they can just help for a certain time, maybe.
 
So can we please legalize opiods? Also, I'd kill a motherfucker for hitting me with naloxone.

We have Naltrexone here in UK never had it myself it sends you into immediate withdrawal and you can shoot up again and again you won't feel a thing it happened to a friend of mine who went over he was given it left hospital and spent nearly £200 on gear before he realised it was futile you have to just go through it.
 
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