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Could a Narcan Vending Machine Help Stem Opioid Deaths Among Young People?

Summer Lin, Los Angeles Times

A free vending machine that dispenses the overdose-reversal drug naloxone was unveiled this week at Santa Clara University, the first such campus resource in the San Francisco Bay Area, school officials said.

The machine at the school's Benson Memorial Center will dispense two-packs of Narcan, a nasal spray for delivering naloxone, with instructions on how to recognize signs of an overdose, how to administer the spray and to call 9-1-1, university officials said in a statement. A QR code on the machine also has a link to a California Public Health Department training video on Narcan.

School officials across the U.S. have been attempting to stem a surge in overdose deaths, especially among teenagers, by increasing the availability of naloxone, which can reverse an opioid overdose in minutes.

Students were the driving force behind the movement at Santa Clara University to apply the principles of harm reduction, which aims to prevent drug-related deaths by providing treatment and services instead of promoting abstinence-only policies, said assistant public health professor Jamie Chang, who helped spearhead the campaign for the machine.

Yaacob Fikre, a computer science student, gets a box of Narcan from a vending machine at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California, on May 9, 2023. The Narcan vending machine is free and no student ID is needed. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group/TNS)
Yaacob Fikre, a computer science student, gets a box of Narcan from a vending machine at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California, on May 9, 2023. The Narcan vending machine is free and no student ID is needed. (Shae Hammond/Bay Area News Group/TNS)

"With the free vending machine that is centralized in the student commons area, we want to de-stigmatize this medication and give students the tools and education they need to keep our community safer," Chang said. "Now, students absolutely recognize that there are life-saving tools like naloxone available, and that they can be part of the solution to the opioid crisis."

Fentanyl, a substance typically used in medical settings that is up to 100 times stronger than morphine and 50 times stronger than heroin, has been increasingly found in the supply of other street drugs or counterfeit prescription pills, contributing to the rise in opioid deaths.

The Campus Opioid Safety Act, which went into effect Jan. 1, requires California community colleges and public colleges to distribute Narcan and provide training.

Chang, who has been helping with small-scale naloxone distribution for years, said the dispenser at Santa Clara University is the first of its kind to be unveiled at a Bay Area university.

"The students 100% understood the need for this on campus, especially because young people are being hit very hard by the fentanyl crisis," she said. "They wanted naloxone to be more accessible. Their advocacy and persistence in seeking solutions was pivotal to this launch."

The machine's unveiling comes almost three years after Charlie Ternan, 22, died in a fraternity bedroom at Santa Clara University a few weeks shy of graduation. Ternan had intended to buy Percocet, a prescription drug he had taken after his surgery, but died after ingesting a counterfeit pill containing fentanyl.

Ternan's father, Ed Ternan, launched the Pasadena-based group Song for Charlie to educate young people about the dangers of fentanyl and counterfeit drugs.

In Los Angeles, USC has launched NaloxoneSC, an online Narcan distribution program, in an effort to curb overdose deaths at the school. The program was founded by pharmacy students and a registered pharmacist.

Free naloxone kits can be picked up at USC's Health Sciences Campus and University Park Campus.

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©2023 Los Angeles Times. Visit latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Comments

Submitted by jbassett on Fri, 05/12/2023 - 09:28

Actually artificial ventilation is the quickest and easiest treatment. I’ve been in EMS for 42 years, opioid overdoses don’t need complicated Narcan administration- just room air ventilation.

—Jimmy Gambone

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