The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Overdose antidote access tied to fewer drug deaths

Doctors write more prescripti­ons; cities stock public places.

- By Mike Stobbe

NEW YORK — Prescripti­ons of the overdose-reversing drug naloxone are soaring, and experts say that could be a reason overdose deaths have stopped rising for the first time in nearly three decades.

The number of naloxone prescripti­ons dispensed by U.S. retail pharmacies doubled from 2017 to last year, rising from 271,000 to 557,000, health officials reported Tuesday.

The United States is in the midst of the deadliest drug overdose epidemic in its history. About 68,000 people died of overdoses last year, according to preliminar­y government statistics reported last month, a drop from the more than 70,000 in 2017.

“One could only hope that this extraordin­ary increase in prescribin­g of naloxone is contributi­ng to that stabilizat­ion or even decline of the crisis,” said Katherine Keyes, a Columbia University drug abuse expert.

About two-thirds of U.S. overdose deaths involve some kind of opioid, a class of drugs that includes heroin, certain prescripti­on painkiller­s and illicit fentanyl. Naloxone is a medication that can reverse opioid overdoses, restoring breathing and bringing someone back to consciousn­ess. It first went on sale in 1971 as an injection. An easier-to-use nasal spray version, Narcan, was approved in 2015.

Local, state and federal officials have embraced naloxone as a lifesaving measure. Cities and states have standing orders that allow pharmacies to give it out without a doctor’s prescripti­on, and officials have tried to put it into the hands of virtually anyone who might encounter a person overdosing, including drug users, police and even librarians.

CDC researcher­s noted there were fewer than 1,300 naloxone prescripti­ons dispensed in 2012, meaning the number grew more than 430fold in six years.

The CDC report is based on data from IQVIA, a company that tracks health care informatio­n, and looked at prescripti­ons from more than 50,000 retail pharmacies across the country. It included both prescripti­ons written by doctors for specific patients and those filled under the broader standing orders.

The report offers only a partial picture, however, since only about 20% of naloxone was sold to retail pharmacies in 2017, according to an earlier government report.

Still, it’s the CDC’s first close look at where most retail dispensing is happening. The agency provided data for about 2,900 of the nation’s 3,100 counties and parishes.

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