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BOH agenda 032217
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BOH agenda 032217
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BOH minutes 032217
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<br />Hillsborough police train to use naloxone in <br />opioid overdoses <br />Molly Horak | Published 03/06/17 12:51am <br /> Duane Hampton is the chief of police for the town of Hillsborough. <br />Photo by Caroline Phillips / The Daily Tar Heel <br /> <br />The Hillsborough Police Department has joined the rest of Orange County’s law enforcement <br />agencies in combating opioid overdose deaths. <br />Stacy Shelp, spokesperson for the Orange County Health Department, said the Hillsborough Police <br />Department was the last agency in Orange County to be trained to use naloxone, the drug that <br />counteracts opioid medication. The Carrboro Police Department was the first to be trained in North <br />Carolina, followed by the Chapel Hill police. <br />“It’s not just about stopping an overdose when it happens, which is life-saving and critical, but we <br />have seen our local law enforcement saving lives and that’s really what it’s all about,” Shelp said. <br />Naloxone reverses the effects of an opioid overdose by blocking its effects. According to the <br />Orange County 2017 Public Health Dashboard, more than a quarter of opioid overdose deaths in <br />Orange County from 2009 to 2013 occurred in Hillsborough, though its population is smaller than <br />other towns in the county. <br />Kim Woodward, operations manager for Orange County Emergency Medical Services, said the <br />naloxone training involved a joint partnership between Orange County Emergency Services and the <br />Orange County Health Department. During training, officers learned about the scope of the opioid <br />problem in North Carolina and how naloxone works as a course of action. <br />“In each of the trainings, I asked officers to raise their hands if they’ve been on the scene and had to <br />wait for EMS to respond, and they all raised their hands,” Woodward said. “Knowing we were <br />getting this tool in the officers’ hands so they wouldn’t have to stand there and have nothing to do <br />— we’ve now given them a lifesaving tool.”
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