Pubdate: Mon, 29 Jun 2015 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2015 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.utsandiego.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Note: Seldom prints LTEs from outside it's circulation area. Author: Dana Littlefield DEPUTIES NOW EQUIPPED WITH ANTI-OVERDOSE TOOL NALOXONE Sheriff's Department Reports 11 Lives Saved Since the start of a pilot program last year, patrol deputies in the Sheriff's Department have been equipped to administer a drug that counteracts the effects of heroin or other opioid overdoses. It's a program that has saved lives, sheriff's officials say. Eleven, so far. Deputies have been trained to supply naloxone hydrochloride when they encounter people in the throes of a drug-related medical emergency. The naloxone acts like an antidote to certain types of narcotics, including painkillers such as morphine and oxycodone. "It's relatively easy," said Capt. James Bovet of the Santee sheriff's station, where the pilot program began in January 2014. Initially, about 100 deputies who patrol Santee, Lakeside and unincorporated areas near El Cajon received instruction on how to administer the drug. "It's an aerosol injector," he said. "You're not putting the needle in anyone." Of the 11 adults the deputies were able to revive, Bovet said, all but one likely suffered from a heroin overdose; the 11th was under the influence of a prescription drug. A 12th person was too far gone by the time the treatment was administered, authorities said. That person died. Later, Sheriff Bill Gore authorized expansion of the program. His was the first law enforcement agency in the state to equip its officers or deputies with naloxone for use in the field. Dr. Bruce Haynes, the county's emergency medical services director, helped develop the training program. Naloxone, known by several brand names including Narcan and Evzio, is a narcotic that can be provided through an injection into muscle or under the skin, into a vein through an IV or via aerosol into the nose. Last year, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved an auto-injector device for use by family members and caregivers in situations where they know of or suspect an opioid drug overdose. Signs include decreased breathing or heart rate, or loss of consciousness. Experts say naloxone restores breathing within two to five minutes and can prevent brain injury. It only works on overdoses caused by opioids and has no potential for abuse. Drug overdoses, particularly those resulting from prescription medications, are the leading cause of injury death in the United States, according to the FDA. In 2013, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that drug overdose deaths had increased steadily for more than a decade. A recent report from the National Center for Health Statistics showed the U.S. death rate from heroin overdoses nearly tripled between 2010 and 2013, indicating that abusers may have turned to the street drug when the prescription medications became harder to obtain. As part of its response to the rise in opioid overdoses, the U.S. Department of Justice launched an online "tool kit" for law enforcement on the use of naloxone in the field. Since the first pilot program was launched in Quincy, Mass., in 2010, many agencies around the country have equipped officers with the drug and trained them on how to use it. Because naloxone is a prescription drug, there are laws governing how it can be administered and by whom. Those laws vary by state. The legal issues become particularly complicated when a prescription drug is provided to someone - like a deputy sheriff - who plans to administer it to a third party other than himself or herself. According to the Network for Public Health Law, New Mexico was the first state to "amend its laws to make it easier for medical professionals to prescribe and dispense naloxone, and for lay administrators to use it without fear of legal repercussions." As of last month, 33 other states including California, and the District of Columbia had made similar changes. In California, Assembly Bill 635 was approved by Gov. Jerry Brown in 2013. It authorized licensed health care providers to issue standing orders for the administration of so-called "opioid antagonists" like naloxone by a family member, friend or other person in a position to assist someone experiencing an overdose. "Why wouldn't that include a deputy sheriff?" Bovet said in a recent interview. In situations where someone has suffered an overdose, he said, deputies have been instructed to leave brochures containing information on how to seek treatment for drug addiction or other resources they may require. The department partnered with the McAlister Institute, one of the largest alcohol- and drug-treatment providers in the county. "We've taken a couple of referrals from them," said Jeanne McAlister, founder and CEO of the institute. "It's just another way to let people know that there is treatment available. I think that's a good thing." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom