CARDINAL
of the Crawford County and Marion County sheriff’s offices, who will carry it with them to be able to quickly respond to emergencies. In addition to aiding overdose victims, she said that law-enforcement values having the drug for personal safety — for themselves and members of their K9 units — in case they are exposed to powerful opioids in the line of work.
Pharmacist Larry Schieber, of Schieber Family Pharmacy in Circleville, requested 216 doses to be distributed by the Circleville Fire Department and the Pickaway County Sheriff’s Office to first responders.
“I knew about it because
our Cardinal (sales) rep mentioned the program was available,” said Schieber, who also serves on the Pickaway County Addiction Action Coalition. He said the Circleville area has been hard-hit by the opioid epidemic, being “right in the middle of it” — between Portsmouth and Columbus.
Narcan “is pretty expensive,” Schieber said, “and in dealing with some of the powerful synthetic opioids, sometimes they’re going through six doses to revive someone. I’m confident this will save lives.”
As a pharmacist, Schieber said he’s on the front lines of the fight against opioid abuse.
“It’s been horrible,” he said.
Cardinal and other distributors of opioids have been the subject of intense
criticism and scrutiny for what some say is a role in the drug crisis. Cardinal has hundreds of lawsuits against it. The company’s announcement last year of the Narcan donations didn’t do much to mollify critics.
Ken Hall, general secretary-treasurer of the Teamsters union, has been a vocal critic of Cardinal and other distributors. Asked about Cardinal’s donation program last year, he told The Dispatch it was like “giving out life rafts after you let the dam break,” though he said it was a “good sign” and a “first step.”
More information on Cardinal’s Opioid Action Program is available at www.cardinalhealth.com/ opioidactionprogram.