The Sunnyvale Sun

Santa Clara University unveils Narcan-dispensing machines

Push for availabili­ty comes three years after student died of fentanyl poisoning

- By Scooty Nickerson snickerson@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

As lawmakers in Sacramento debate solutions to the fentanyl crisis, public health students at Santa Clara University unveiled their own approach on May 9: a free on-campus vending machine that dispenses canisters of the opioid-overdose reversing medication Narcan to anyone who wants it.

It's the first of its type on a Bay Area campus, with Stanford University expected to introduce one in a few weeks.

Students who helped lead the effort say its an important first step in addressing growing use of the powerful drug, which is blamed for one-in-five youth deaths statewide.

“SCU (Santa Clara University) is a party school, so drug use is something that we know happens on campus, off campus or near campus,” said Setareh Tehrani, one of the public health majors who championed the project.

School officials say that the vending machine is designed to solve one of the biggest barriers that students face in acquiring Narcan — its high cost. The drug, which is also known as naloxone, costs anywhere from $70 to $150 without insurance — a price tag that puts it out of reach for many students who live on a tight budget.

“The first thing is that it's free, and it's in a place that is widely accessible to students,” said Santa Clara

University Assistant Professor of Public Health Jamie Chang, who helped lead the campaign for the campus vending machine. “(But even) regardless of whether or not students decide to take the Naloxone, we're hoping that it at least sends the message that they need to take this seriously and that there are tools out there for them.”

Bay Area high school districts have also moved to make Narcan more readily available on their campuses, though some districts have lagged behind in getting their own supply. Public colleges in California, meanwhile, are required to distribute doses of Narcan at their campus health centers.

Students in the public health department of Santa Clara University have also started reaching out to campus organizati­ons like fraterniti­es and sororities to make sure they know how to get Narcan and other useful tools like fentanyl test strips. The powerful-opioid,

which is 50 times more potent than heroin, is especially dangerous because it's often laced into counterfei­t painkiller­s and stimulants popular with young people. Users often have no idea they ingesting fentanyl.

Fraterniti­es in particular are top-of-mind to many students who remember when, Charlie Ternan, a former SCU student, died

of fentanyl poisoning while seemingly asleep in his offcampus fraternity bedroom back in 2020.

Charlie's father, Ed Ternan, founded a nonprofit called “Song for Charlie” after his son passed away. The group's goal is to spread awareness about the dangers of pills laced with fentanyl. One of the organizati­on's major pushes led to March 9 being recognized

as National Fentanyl Awareness Day.

Ed Ternan said he fully supports Santa Clara University's push to set-up a Narcan vending machine on campus as part of their own Awareness Day ceremony. But he isn't sure if Narcan alone is the solution.

“There's a chance that Narcan may have saved Charlie — if his roommates had been educated about how to identify an opioid overdose and reacted quickly,” Ternan said. “But in reality, the chances are small. His friends walked by several times, his door

was open, and they assumed he was napping.”

Meanwhile, public health students on campus May 9 were adamant that their classmates pay attention to the crisis, which claims the lives of hundreds of young California­ns every year.

“People are more aware of fentanyl. We've talked about it everywhere, from Greek life to club sports to varsity sports,” said Olivia Pruett, a senior who studies public health. But Narcan “is only effective if people have it when they need it. This conversati­on has to keep happening.”

 ?? ?? Students chat at an informatio­n table set up to spread awareness about the dangers of fentanyl at Santa Clara University on May 9. That and the installati­on of a vending machine that dispenses Narcan are part of a plan to make students aware of the drug.
Students chat at an informatio­n table set up to spread awareness about the dangers of fentanyl at Santa Clara University on May 9. That and the installati­on of a vending machine that dispenses Narcan are part of a plan to make students aware of the drug.
 ?? PHOTOS BY SHAE HAMMOND — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? The Narcan vending machine installed May 9at Santa Clara University dispenses the product for free and requires no identifica­tion.
PHOTOS BY SHAE HAMMOND — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER The Narcan vending machine installed May 9at Santa Clara University dispenses the product for free and requires no identifica­tion.
 ?? ?? Jamie Chang, assistant professor of public health, stands at Santa Clara University on May 9. The institutio­n unveiled a free Narcan vending machine. Narcan is used to reverse the effect of opioid overdoses.
Jamie Chang, assistant professor of public health, stands at Santa Clara University on May 9. The institutio­n unveiled a free Narcan vending machine. Narcan is used to reverse the effect of opioid overdoses.
 ?? ?? Computer science student Yaacob Fikre gets a box of Narcan from the vending machine on campus. Students say the availabili­ty is an important step in addressing the fentanyl crisis.
Computer science student Yaacob Fikre gets a box of Narcan from the vending machine on campus. Students say the availabili­ty is an important step in addressing the fentanyl crisis.

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