Los Angeles Times

State to provide antidote for opioid overdoses

First responders, universiti­es and other organizati­ons will get naloxone for free.

- By Summer Lin

California will provide first responders, universiti­es and other qualifying organizati­ons with a generic version of Narcan, the opioid overdose reversal drug, for free, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced. .

CalRx’s Naloxone Access Initiative will purchase over-the-counter naloxone for $24 a pack, which is about half the market price, from Amneal Pharmaceut­icals, a New Jersey-based manufactur­er, according to a news release from Newsom’s office.

The deal enables the state to buy 3.2 million twin packs of the drug instead of the 2 million it bought at the previous price.

“California is disrupting the drug industry with CalRx — securing life-saving drugs at lower and transparen­t prices,” Newsom said in a statement.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion approved selling Narcan, the leading version of naloxone, without a prescripti­on in March 2023.

The FDA has also approved the generic version of Narcan spray made by Amneal Pharmaceut­icals.

Announced in 2019, CalRX is the state’s effort to contract with generic and biosimilar drug makers to offer cheaper versions of insulin and other medication­s. The goal is to reduce shortages and prod drugmakers to lower their prices, saving the state and its residents in the process.

Thousands of California­ns die every year of opioid overdoses and accidental ingestion. In response, state health officials have distribute­d millions of naloxone kits for free.

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