Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, College of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, New York; Center for Drug Use and HIV Research (CDUHR), College of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, New York.
Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, College of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, New York; Center for Drug Use and HIV Research (CDUHR), College of Global Public Health, New York University, New York, New York.
Transl Res. 2021 Aug;234:43-57. doi: 10.1016/j.trsl.2021.03.001. Epub 2021 Mar 5.
Over the past 25 years, naloxone has emerged as a critical lifesaving overdose antidote. Public health advocates and community activists established early methods for naloxone distribution to people who inject drugs, but a legacy of stigmatization and opposition to universal naloxone access continues to limit the drug's full potential to reduce opioid-related mortality. The establishment of naloxone distribution programs under the umbrella of syringe exchange programs faces the same practical, ideological and financial barriers to expansion similar to those faced by syringe exchange programs themselves. The expansion of naloxone from the confines of a few syringe exchange programs to what we see today represents an enormous triumph for the grass-roots activists, service providers, and public health professionals who have fought to guarantee lay access to naloxone. Despite the extensive efforts to expand access to naloxone, naloxone continues to remains a scarce resource in many US localities. Considerable naloxone "deserts" remain and even where there is naloxone access, it does not always reach those at risk. Promising areas for expansion include the development of more robust telehealth methods for naloxone distribution, including subsidized mail delivery programs; lowering barriers to pharmacy access; working with hospitals, ambulances, and law enforcement to expand naloxone "leave behind" programs; providing naloxone co-prescription with medications for opioid use disorder; and working with prisons, shelters, and networks of people who use drugs to increase access to the lifesaving medication. Efforts to ensure over-the-counter and low- or no-cost naloxone are ongoing and stand alongside medication-assisted treatments as efficacious, readily-actionable, and cost-efficient population-level interventions available for combatting opioid-related overdose in the United States.
在过去的 25 年中,纳洛酮已成为一种重要的救命解毒剂。公共卫生倡导者和社区活动家为注射毒品者建立了早期的纳洛酮分发方法,但对普遍获得纳洛酮的污名化和反对仍然限制了该药物充分发挥降低阿片类药物相关死亡率的潜力。在注射器交换计划的保护伞下建立纳洛酮分发计划,同样面临着扩大规模的实际、思想和财务障碍,这些障碍与注射器交换计划本身所面临的障碍相似。纳洛酮从少数几个注射器交换计划的范围内扩展到我们今天所看到的范围,这是基层活动家、服务提供者和公共卫生专业人员的巨大胜利,他们为保证非专业人员能够获得纳洛酮而努力。尽管为扩大纳洛酮的使用范围做出了广泛的努力,但在许多美国地方,纳洛酮仍然是一种稀缺资源。相当多的纳洛酮“荒漠”仍然存在,即使在有纳洛酮可获得的地方,也并非总能到达那些有风险的人。有希望扩大规模的领域包括开发更强大的远程医疗纳洛酮分发方法,包括补贴邮件投递计划;降低获得药房的障碍;与医院、救护车和执法部门合作,扩大纳洛酮“遗留”计划;为阿片类药物使用障碍患者开具纳洛酮处方与药物治疗相结合;与监狱、避难所以及吸毒者网络合作,增加获得救命药物的机会。确保非处方和低成本或无成本纳洛酮的努力正在进行,并与药物辅助治疗一起作为有效的、易于实施的、具有成本效益的人群干预措施,用于对抗美国阿片类药物相关的过量使用。