The Columbus Dispatch

Chicago giving departing inmates overdose-reversing drug

- By Don Babwin

CHICAGO — Chicago now gives at-risk inmates the overdose-reversing drug naloxone upon their release from jail and Los Angeles is poised to follow suit, putting the antidote in as many hands as possible as part of a multifacet­ed approach to combatting the nation’s opioid epidemic.

The Cook County Jail in Chicago, which is the largest single-site jail in the country, has trained about 900 inmates how to use naloxone nasal spray devices since last summer and has distribute­d 400 of them to at-risk men and women as they got out. The devices can undo the effects of an opiate overdose almost immediatel­y and are identical to those used by officers in many of the country’s law enforcemen­t agencies.

Sheriff Tom Dart, whose office runs the jail, said addicts are most at-risk of fatally overdosing in the two weeks after getting out because of their time away from drugs while locked up.

“We’ve got to keep them alive (and) if we can get them through that two-week window, they might get treatment, get off drugs,” he said.

Dr. Connie Mennella, the chair of Correction­al Health for the county’s health and hospitals system, which administer­s the program, said only inmates are being trained to use naloxone, but that she eventually hopes their relatives and friends can also be trained.

“We are trying to saturate this community with this drug and we are educating them to tell their buddy, mother, father how to use it, where they keep it and, ‘If you come home and see me not responding, to go get it and use it,’” she said.

Proponents say such jail programs can be the difference between a former inmate living and dying, as the naloxone often can be administer­ed by an overdosing addict, a friend or family member before emergency responders can reach them.

And Dr. Arastou Aminzadeh, the correction­al health-medical director for the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services, said the kits are particular­ly important for just-released inmates because the same amount of drugs they once used to get high before they were locked up could now kill them.

“Their threshold has dropped but they may use the amount of drugs they used to use,” said Aminzadeh, who is helping Los Angeles jails prepare to begin its naloxone program early next year.

It is too soon to gauge the effectiven­ess of Cook County’s program, but Dart said anecdotal evidence suggests that the kits have saved lives, including a man who was arrested again, returned to jail, and told of how a friend he had trained to use the kit had done so when he overdosed.

In New York City, more than 4,000 kits have been distribute­d to friends and relatives of inmates at the city’s jail at Rikers Island since the program there was launched in 2014.

“We did a survey of their use of the kits after six months and 226 people responded to the survey and found 50 usages (of the naloxone), and found that 87 percent of the overdoses where the naloxone was used, (the victim) survived,” said Dr. Ross MacDonald, chief of Medicine, Division of Correction­al Health Services, New York City Health and Hospitals.

Others have also seen encouragin­g results. In Rhode Island, a study of 100 inmates found they were able to successful­ly administer the drug after being released, with a few using it to reverse their own overdoses. A study in Scotland, meanwhile, found that the number of opioid-related inmate deaths dropped within the first four weeks of release after naloxone kits were distribute­d.

 ?? [G-JUN YAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Sheriff Tom Dart holds naloxone at the sheriff’s office in the Cook County Jail in Chicago. The jail has begun handing kits containing naloxone to inmates on their way out the door.
[G-JUN YAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Sheriff Tom Dart holds naloxone at the sheriff’s office in the Cook County Jail in Chicago. The jail has begun handing kits containing naloxone to inmates on their way out the door.

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