Lake County Record-Bee

With overdose deaths surging, advocates on the ground push for over-the-counter Naloxone

- By Aneri Pattani

Louise Vincent figures her group, the North Carolina Survivors Union, saves at least 1,690 lives a year.

The harm-reduction and syringe service program distribute­s the opioid overdose reversal medication naloxone to people who use drugs. Research suggests this approach is effective, since people who use drugs are most likely to witness an overdose and administer naloxone.

The 1,690 number refers to how many times participan­ts in the Survivors Union reported using the medication between July 2020 and June 2021. But the true number of lives saved could be higher: The program distribute­d nearly 9,400 doses of naloxone during that time.

Now, as overdose deaths nationwide reach all-time highs, the Biden administra­tion has made increasing access to naloxone a key part of its overdose prevention strategy. It has allotted an unpreceden­ted $30 million in federal funds for harm-reduction groups and announced the creation of a model law that state legislatur­es can pass to improve access.

But Vincent and her peers say the administra­tion has not addressed their greatest barrier to obtaining the lifesaving medication: naloxone’s prescripti­on-only status.

“This designatio­n is the root of all evil,” said Nabarun Dasgupta, a scientist at the University of North Carolina’s school of public health and co-founder of the Buyers Club, a collective of more than 100 harm-reduction programs in the U.S.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion approved naloxone as a prescripti­on drug to treat opioid overdose in 1971, when it was only an injectable drug. That remains the cheapest form and the one used most by harm-reduction groups, which have long relied on a deal with Pfizer to buy the medication for less than $5 a dose. However, newer, nasal spray versions of naloxone — including the brand-name drug Narcan, which has a discounted price of about $38 a dose — are available in many police stations, libraries and schools.

All 50 states allow individual­s to buy naloxone at the pharmacy without a prescripti­on. States don’t have the authority to designate it as an over-the-counter medication, but they’ve created workaround­s — such as a state health official writing one prescripti­on that can be used for every resident. But these workaround­s don’t apply to organizati­ons that purchase naloxone in bulk from drugmakers. When a hospital, harm-reduction group or any other organizati­on orders naloxone from pharmaceut­ical companies, the companies are required to treat naloxone the way the federal government sees it: as a prescripti­on medication, Dasgupta said. As a result, the companies impose a series of requiremen­ts on buyers.

For example, an organizati­on that orders naloxone must have a doctor sign for the order, and that doctor must be someone who has not signed for another group. The organizati­on must also have an address that is not a private home to receive shipments, a medical or pharmacy license and the ability to comply with regulation­s for storing and dispensing the drugs.

Hospitals and health department­s can easily fulfill these requiremen­ts. But they can be onerous for smaller, grassroots groups, many of which are led by volunteers and operate out of makeshift home or car offices, said Eliza Wheeler and Maya Doe-Simkins, co-founders of the Buyers Club and co-authors of a paper with Dasgupta on this subject.

When these groups can’t order naloxone, the people they serve can die, Wheeler and Doe-Simkins said.

Those clients won’t necessaril­y turn to pharmacies. Indeed, as overdose deaths surged in 2020, pharmacy sales of naloxone decreased. The cost of the medication, requiremen­ts to show ID, a fear of discrimina­tion from pharmacist­s and an inability to find a pharmacy that stocks naloxone are all barriers, said West Virginia University researcher Robin Pollini, who studies naloxone distributi­on.

So harm-reduction groups are calling on the FDA to allow naloxone to be sold overthe-counter so they can order it more easily and distribute it to the people at the greatest risk of overdosing.

The product has long been deemed safe and effective for community use, harm-reduction groups say, even by the FDA. Other advocates have suggested that the Department of Health and Human Services issue an order allowing manufactur­ers to sell naloxone to organizati­ons buying in bulk without a prescriber’s signoff.

“Having more naloxone on the street can only do good. It can’t do harm,” said Thomas Stopka, an epidemiolo­gist and substance use researcher at Tufts University School of Medicine. “We need to pull out all the stops and consider a bunch of different avenues to address this issue of supply.”

The concern was highlighte­d this year when a manufactur­ing problem depleted Pfizer’s stock of naloxone and the company couldn’t fill orders for harm-reduction groups. Hikma, another company that makes naloxone, offered to donate 50,000 injectable doses to the affected groups. But because of naloxone’s prescripti­on status and Hikma’s associated paperwork requiremen­ts, only three harm-reduction programs qualified, Dasgupta said. (Pfizer said that the manufactur­ing issue has been resolved and that shipments resumed this fall.)

In Oklahoma, Stop Harm on Tulsa Streets (SHOTS) didn’t qualify for Hikma’s donation because the group didn’t have a doctor who could sign for its order, cofounder Hana Fields said. The doctor the group had previously worked with retired in January, and SHOTS had yet to find a replacemen­t. Many doctors are worried about liability or simply don’t return her calls, she said. In the meantime, SHOTS relies on naloxone donations from other programs.

“The stakes are so high. My friends are dying,” said Fields, whose life has been saved by naloxone and who has been in recovery for seven years.

Treatment for addiction is available. For help, call the free and confidenti­al treatment referral hotline (1-800662-HELP), or visit findtreatm­ent.gov.

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