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BOH agenda 012716
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BOH agenda 012716
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BOH minutes 012716
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Orange County is the first health department to take advantage of the 2013 Good Samaritan /Naloxone <br />Access legislation, allowing doctors, family and friends to administer naloxone to someone who <br />overdoses on opioids, without being prosecuted. <br />"Naloxone, also known as Narcan, quickly and effectively reverses overdose, if administered in time. This <br />program places Orange County on the map, leading the way for other communities to follow this cost <br />effective, life- saving example," said Dr. Colleen Bridger, director of the Orange County Health <br />Department. <br />Because of Orange County regulation, before EMS is allowed on the scene, police officers must arrive <br />first and make sure it is safe for unarmed personnel. <br />"It may take (EMS) a minute or two, three minutes depending on where they're staging, so if the officer <br />can do that quick assessment, assemble the kit and administer that naloxone, you're talking minutes," <br />Atack said. "Minutes when you're running out of oxygen, when you're brain is starving, when you may go <br />into cardiac arrest because there's not enough oxygen, can really save a life." <br />Kim Woodward of Orange County EMS said medical staff has been carrying naloxone for nearly 30 years <br />and due to changes made in 2013, non - medically trained officers are now able to carry it as well. <br />"Because the Good Samaritan Law expanded, it allowed lay -folks to give the naloxone," she said. "If lay - <br />folks can give the naloxone, then non - medically trained folks, such as our law enforcement, could give the <br />naloxone as well." <br />Atack said heroin use across Orange County is on the rise due to the federal government making it <br />harder for people to get prescription opioids. <br />"It's a second or third chance at life for someone to get clean," he said. "I've seen neighbor's kids suffer <br />with addiction and I can't imagine dealing with that on a daily basis so anything we can simply do to give <br />someone a shot to get right." <br />Officers in Chapel Hill, Carrboro and across the rest of Orange County are now trained and carrying <br />naloxone kits. <br />Blackwood said 97 percent of his staff has been trained. <br />
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