Importance: Widespread naloxone access is a key policy response to the opioid crisis. Naloxone availability is typically estimated from pharmacy sales, which exclude naloxone provided by community organizations, hospitals, and clinics, or sold over-the-counter.
Objective: To estimate naloxone knowledge, carrying, purchase, and use among US adults.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This survey study included noninstitutionalized adults aged 18 years and older from a national sample and a sample self-reporting opioid dependence. Respondents answered online questions between June 7 and June 29, 2024, about naloxone knowledge, carrying, purchase, and use.
Exposures: Opioid misuse, risk of overdose, risk of overdose by person known to respondent.
Main Outcomes And Measures: Naloxone knowledge, prevalence of naloxone carrying, purchase, and administration.
Results: The survey included 1515 individuals from a national sample (median [IQR] age, 45 [33-58] years; 770 women [50.8%]; 215 Black [14.2%], 1087 White [71.8%]) and 512 who self-reported opioid dependence. In the national sample, 50 respondents (3.3%) reported opioid dependence, yielding 562 respondents reporting opioid dependence (median [IQR] age, 41 [35-48] years; 404 female [70.2%]; 17 Black [3.0%], 494 White [87.9%]). Overall, 1164 respondents-700 (46.2%) in the national sample and 500 (89.0%) reporting opioid dependence-had heard of naloxone and correctly identified its purpose. One hundred sixty participants (10.6%) in the national sample and 340 participants (60.5%) in the sample reporting opioid dependence reported carrying naloxone. Among those reporting they were "very likely to overdose," 22 respondents (31.0%) in the national sample and 31 (73.8%) with opioid dependence reported carrying naloxone. Among those who know someone very likely to overdose, 43 participants (25.4%) in the national sample and 190 participants (70.1%) reporting opioid dependence reported carrying naloxone. Among those who ever carried naloxone, 108 (42.4%) in the national sample and 97 (22.6%) reporting opioid dependence had ever purchased naloxone. Overall, 128 respondents (8.4%) in the national sample and 267 respondents (47.5%) reporting opioid dependence reported administering naloxone to someone else while 93 (6.1%) in the national sample and 221 (39.3%) reporting opioid dependence reported being administered naloxone.
Conclusions And Relevance: In this survey study of naloxone, most respondents reporting opioid dependence correctly identified naloxone's purpose and carried it. Most naloxone carried was not purchased, suggesting a need for new ways, including rapid online surveys, to monitor naloxone possession.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.62698 | DOI Listing |
Subst Abuse Rehabil
March 2025
Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
This study aimed to evaluate the use of prehospital medication-assisted treatment (MAT) administration by Emergency Medical Services for opioid use disorder (OUD) through a review of literature published between 2014-2024. A search of the NCBI repository using selected keywords returned N=28 results; articles meeting the inclusion criteria (n=13) were reviewed and analyzed. Heterogeneity among studies was assessed using the Chi-squared test and I² statistic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAddict Sci Clin Pract
March 2025
Health through Flourishing, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, 125 Nashua Street, Boston, MA, 02114, USA.
Background: An estimated 84,181 people died due to opioid overdose in 2022 alone [1]. Mobile technologies may offer an additional pathway to provide support to people seeking recovery from opioid use disorder (OUD). To this end, we conducted a content analysis of opioid-related apps to determine to what extent apps exist that provide support to people seeking or in recovery from OUD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There were 2227 drug-related deaths in Germany in 2023, corresponding to a rise of 12% over the previous year and a doubling over the course of a decade. Approximately 60% of these deaths were related to opioid consumption. In this narrative review, we discuss whether take-home naloxone (THN) might lower the mortality of persons with opioid dependency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Pain Headache Rep
March 2025
Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Purpose Of Review: Herein we review recent trends in opioid prescribing, the rise in office-based surgeries, and propose a framework to minimize opioid consumption following such procedures.
Recent Findings: Outpatient surgical procedures are increasing year over year in the United States. This observed increase is expected to continue due to the financial incentives to perform outpatient procedures.
J Opioid Manag
March 2025
SA Pharmacy, Government of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4786-022X.
Introduction: Chronic pain is a leading cause of chronic disease in Australia, with a 2020 report indicating that one in five Australians aged over 45 experience chronic pain. The high prevalence of chronic pain accounts for significant healthcare utilization and associated costs, with the economic impact of chronic pain estimated to be AUD$139 billion in 2018.
Case Presentations: This paper uses two exemplar cases to demonstrate inadequacies within the current systems supporting those with chronic pain and the associated impacts these inadequacies have on patient outcomes and healthcare costs.
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