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Erschienen in: Journal of Community Health 2/2018

29.08.2017 | Original Paper

Descriptive Epidemiology for Community-wide Naloxone Administration by Police Officers and Firefighters Responding to Opioid Overdose

verfasst von: Sarah Cercone Heavey, Alan M. Delmerico, Gale Burstein, Cheryll Moore, William F. Wieczorek, R. Lorraine Collins, Yu-Ping Chang, Gregory G. Homish

Erschienen in: Journal of Community Health | Ausgabe 2/2018

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Abstract

Recently implemented New York State policy allows police and fire to administer intranasal naloxone when responding to opioid overdoses. This work describes the geographic distribution of naloxone administration (NlxnA) by police and fire when responding to opioid overdoses in Erie County, NY, an area of approximately 920,000 people including the City of Buffalo. Data are from opioid overdose reports (N = 800) filed with the Erie County Department of Health (July 2014–June 2016) by police/fire and include the overdose ZIP code, reported drug(s) used, and NlxnA. ZIP code data were geocoded and mapped to examine spatial patterns of NlxnA. The highest NlxnA rates (range: 0.01–84.3 per 10,000 population) were concentrated within the city and first-ring suburbs. Within 3 min 27.3% responded to NlxnA and 81.6% survived the overdose. The average individual was male (70.3%) and 31.4 years old (SD = 10.3). Further work is needed to better understand NlxnA and overdose, including exploring how the neighborhood environment creates a context for drug use, and how this context influences naloxone use and overdose experiences.
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Metadaten
Titel
Descriptive Epidemiology for Community-wide Naloxone Administration by Police Officers and Firefighters Responding to Opioid Overdose
verfasst von
Sarah Cercone Heavey
Alan M. Delmerico
Gale Burstein
Cheryll Moore
William F. Wieczorek
R. Lorraine Collins
Yu-Ping Chang
Gregory G. Homish
Publikationsdatum
29.08.2017
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of Community Health / Ausgabe 2/2018
Print ISSN: 0094-5145
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-3610
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10900-017-0422-8

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