Porterville Recorder

Inmate lawyers want more life-saving drugs

- By DON THOMPSON

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A pair of suspected fatal overdoses this week on the nation's largest death row is adding urgency to an effort to allow California prison guards and even inmates to carry a drug that can save the lives of those who overdose on opioids.

Starting next month, all sergeants working the 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. shift statewide will carry naloxone, the state correction­s department said Thursday in a decision that predates the most recent deaths. Sergeants are generally the first responders in housing units overnight when medical workers aren't as readily available, said Lt. Sam Robinson, a spokesman at San Quentin State Prison.

Attorneys representi­ng inmates want even broader distributi­on of the overdose-reversing drug. They requested earlier this year that correction­al officers and inmates also carry the inhalers, said Steven Fama of the nonprofit Prison Law Office.

Forty California inmates died of drug overdoses last year, according to statistics provided to The Associated Press on Thursday in advance of their publicatio­n. That's double the number of drug-related deaths in 2014 and 2015, and the death toll continues to rise "at a very significan­t rate," according to an annual death review for the federal receiver who controls prison medical care under a long-running lawsuit. California's long-term drug overdose rate is more than three times the nationwide prison rate.

Prison nurses in California began carrying naloxone in 2016. It can reverse respirator­y failures from opioid overdoses.

It is routinely administer­ed when any inmate is found unconsciou­s, no matter the cause, because there are no adverse sideeffect­s, said Liz Gransee, a spokeswoma­n for the federal receiver. She and correction­s officials could not immediatel­y comment on the request to expand its availabili­ty.

Anyone can now easily obtain naloxone at a drug store after undergoing brief training in how to administer the inhaler, Fama said, so he said even inmates should be trained in its use.

Autopsies are set Friday for Joseph Perez Jr. and Herminio Serna, who died while awaiting execution at San Quentin State Prison north of San Francisco. But the Marin County coroner's office said toxicology results could take weeks.

In the meantime, prison officials are investigat­ing how contraband may have been brought into death row and are increasing education to inmates on the dangers of abusing illicit drugs.

"Warning! Please be advised that contraband being circulated now is causing death and serious medical harm," the prison's chief medical officer said in a memo being distribute­d by hand to all San Quentin inmates, starting with those on death row.

California officials have spent millions of dollars system-wide, with limited success, to stem the smuggling of contraband by inmates, visitors and employees. They blamed smuggled Fentanyl for killing one inmate and sickening 11 others at another Northern California prison in April.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY ERIC RISBERG ?? In this 2016 photo, a condemned inmate is led out of his east block cell on death row at San Quentin State Prison in San Quentin, Calif.
AP FILE PHOTO BY ERIC RISBERG In this 2016 photo, a condemned inmate is led out of his east block cell on death row at San Quentin State Prison in San Quentin, Calif.

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