Resources
50 Results (showing 21 - 30)
Results sorted by updated date (newest first)
Results sorted by updated date (newest first)
Posted 11/21/2019 (updated 3/28/2024)
The New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) convened a Technical Working Group on Resuscitation Training in Naloxone Programs to ensure that overdose programs in New York State (NYS) and elsewhere are afforded the best possible resuscitation protocol guidance tailored to suspected opioid overdoses in diverse settings.
Posted 11/21/2019 (updated 3/28/2024)
This is a briefing for law enforcement personnel around the world on how to incorporate, support, and create space for approaches that aim to increase public safety and health, reduce harm to people who use drugs, and provide law enforcement alternatives to common punitive models.
Posted 7/13/2020 (updated 3/28/2024)
Two videos for Spanish speakers on using Naloxone properly.
Posted 6/2/2020 (updated 3/28/2024)
… (OD) events and deaths since the onset of Coronavirus (COVID-19). Sometimes these deaths come at alarming levels because … around data. This webinar covered four main topics: How COVID-19 and OD death intersect Populations that are …
Posted 5/22/2020 (updated 3/28/2024)
As a response to the ongoing opioid crisis, every US state has increased access to naloxone through a variety of expanded prescribing methods, such as standing orders or protocols. This reports examines the impact of a standing order for rural Georgia pharmacies.
Posted 11/21/2019 (updated 3/28/2024)
The purpose of this protocol is to provide guidelines for the use of Naloxone and to reduce the number of fatalities.
Posted 11/21/2019 (updated 3/28/2024)
North Carolina Harm Reduction Naloxone Log Template
Posted 5/12/2020 (updated 3/28/2024)
Corrections-Based Responses to the Opioid Epidemic: Lessons from New York State’s Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution Program focuses on the efforts of NYS to implement an overdose education and naloxone distribution program that teaches all soon-to-be released people in state correctional facilities—as well as their families and corrections staff—about the risks of opioid use, trains them in the use of naloxone, and offers it to them free of charge at release.
Posted 11/21/2019 (updated 3/28/2024)
Opioid overdose is reversible through the timely administration of naloxone, which has been used by emergency medical services for decades.
Posted 4/27/2020 (updated 3/28/2024)
To mitigate the opioid overdose crisis, states have implemented a variety of legal interventions aimed at increasing access to the opioid antagonist naloxone. Recently, Virginia and Vermont mandated the coprescription of naloxone for potentially at-risk patients.