In the 10 U.S. states with the most opioid overdose deaths in 2016,
roughly four in five drugstores stocked naloxone, a survey of 120
pharmacists found. But nearly half of these pharmacists incorrectly
thought that they could only dispense the treatment to adults.
"Hindering access to naloxone to youth who are able to recognize the
signs of an overdose and administer this life-saving medication
undermines the effectiveness of these policies," said Dr. Andrew
Adesman, chief of developmental and behavioral pediatrics at Cohen
Children's Medical Center of New York in Lake Success and senior
author of the study.
Overdoses of opioids like morphine or heroin can be deadly because
these drugs slow breathing, thereby reducing the supply of oxygen to
the body.
Naloxone blocks the ability of opioids to affect the nervous system,
including the regulation of breathing. The trouble with any delays
or roadblocks in access to naloxone is that it needs to be given
quickly to be effective in countering the potentially fatal effects
of an opioid overdose.
"If a pharmacy was not willing to provide naloxone to an adolescent,
they could still obtain the medication through a prescription from
their doctor, or, theoretically, if they were accompanied by a
parent or other adult," said Kirk Evoy of the University of Texas at
Austin College of Pharmacy and University Health System in San
Antonio.
"I think the biggest concern would be teens who didn't feel
comfortable disclosing opioid use to a doctor or parent, whether it
be their own use or a friend's use, and thus decided to give up
trying to obtain it after initially being turned away," Evoy, who
wasn't involved in the study, said by email.
Most pharmacy employees surveyed correctly stated that no
prescription was needed for naloxone, researchers report in the
Journal of Adolescent Health. And most also understood that people
were allowed to get naloxone to use for another individual who might
be at risk for an overdose.
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But only 52% of pharmacists correctly stated that there was no
minimum age for purchasing naloxone.
Among chain drugstores in the survey, Walmart and Walgreens were
more likely to stock naloxone than CVS.
Where drugstores did stock naloxone, 67% carried only the nasal
spray form of the drug and 12% only dispensed injected versions.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how drugstore availability of naloxone might directly impact teen
access to the treatment or overdose deaths.
One limitation is that it only focused on 20 drugstores in each of
the states examined, and it's possible survey results from this
small sample of pharmacists might not reflect naloxone access
nationwide.
It's also possible that some pharmacists incorrectly believe there
are age restrictions for naloxone because there are other drugs with
age restrictions like smoking cessation aids, said Talia Puzantian,
a researcher at the Keck Graduate Institute School of Pharmacy and
Health Sciences at the University of Southern California in Los
Angeles.
"Without naloxone on hand, the risk for fatal overdose is
significant," Puzantian, who wasn't involved in the study, said by
email.
"Increasingly, adolescents are using and misusing both prescription
opioids and illicit opioids," Puzantian said. "As prescription
opioids become more difficult and costly to obtain, users are
increasingly using the riskier illicitly manufactured pills or
heroin which are increasingly adulterated with the more potent
opioid fentanyl which is now driving the majority of opioid overdose
deaths."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2lPW0Hy Journal of Adolescent Health, online
September 17, 2019.
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