Title: Building Capacity in Overdose Prevention
1Building Capacity in Overdose Prevention
- Sharon Stancliff, MD
- Harm Reduction Coalition
2Accidental overdose, homicide, and suicide
deaths, New York City, 1990-2001
S. Galea
3Physiology of overdose
- Generally happens over course of 1-3 hours- the
stereotype needle in the arm death is only
about 15 - Opioids depress the urge to breath decrease
response to carbon dioxide -leading to
respiratory depression and death - Sporer Ann Emerg Med 2006
4Who overdoses?
- Most often dependent long term users who are not
in treatment with 5- 10 years of experience
rather than new users- about 17 occur among new
users - Sporer 2006
5Overdoses are often witnessed
- But what to do?
- Fear of police may prevent calling 911
- Abandonment is the worst response
- Witnesses may try ineffectual things first
- Salt milk shots
- Tracy Drug Alcohol Depend 2005
6Antidote
- Naloxone (Narcan), an injectable opioid
antagonist will reverse the effects of opioids
potentially preventing a fatal overdose.
7Rationale for overdose prevention programs
- Overdoses are rarely instant
- There are often bystanders
- Naloxone is a safe and effective antidote
- Many overdoses are preventable with prompt
recognition and treatment
8At least 2,642 overdose reversals How many lives
saved?
NPR.org
9New York a grassroots beginning
- 2004
- A syringe exchange program (SEP) initiated a
pilot overdose program - Injection Drug Users Health Alliance lobbied
successfully for NYC funds to provide overdose
prevention services with naloxone at the SEPs - 2005
- Physician hired to initiate overdose prevention
at SEPs New York Academy of Medicine hired for
evaluation
10New York State law
- 8/05A bill approving provision of naloxone to
trained lay persons passed unanimously - NYSDOH, AIDS Institute charged with crafting
regulations - April 2006 Law took effect
11Implementation NYS
- Creation of regulations NYSDOH called a
consultation of large programs Chicago, New
Mexico, San Francisco, Baltimore, NYC - NYS providing overdose kits,sample curriculum,
policies and procedures, fact sheets etc - Joint letter from AIDS Institute and OASAS to all
drug treatment programs - Outreach to state SEPs, AIDS organizations, drug
treatment programs - Funding of evaluation at a methadone program
12Implementation NYC
- Continued funding medical staff at the Harm
Reduction Coalition to - Prescribe naloxone at SEPs
- Provide training and technical assistance to SEPs
and other agencies implementing overdose
prevention programs - Provide education to medical providers
- Evaluate program
13Get the SKOOP Skills and Knowledge on Overdose
Prevention
14The training 10-20 minutes
- Prevention understanding the role of
- mixing drugs
- reduced tolerance
- using alone
- Overdose recognition
- Actions
- Call 911
- Rescue breathing- using dummy
- Naloxone administration
15Major risk factors
- Use following a period of abstinence
- Incarceration
- Hospitalisation
- Drug treatment/detox
- Mixing classes of drugs
- Primarily other CNS depressants
- Cocaine is involved in nearly 40 of NYC
overdoses - Sporer 2006, Chan Acad Emerg Med 2006
16Death following incarceration
- Washington State Corrections 30,237 inmates
released - Overall mortality777/100,000 2.5x expected
- First 2 weeks 12.7x expected with overdose rate
of 1840/100,000 (x27) - 60 involved opioids 60
- 74 involved cocaine and other stimulants
- Bingswanger NEJM 2007
17Drug combinations, accidental overdose deaths,
New York City, 1990-2001 (n 10,091) 1-2 deaths
each day
Opiates
Cocaine
Alcohol
S. Galea
18Identifying those at risk
- Injectors higher risk than nasal insufflators
- History of previous overdose is a major predictor
of future overdose- may be a key screening
question - Wines 2007, Coffin 2007
19Other risk factors
- Overdose is more likely in the presence of
significant illness cirrhosis, AIDS, coronary
disease, pulmonary disease - Major changes in opioid supply gt1000 deaths USA
2006 with fentanyl - Depression
- Wang AIDS 2005, Wines Drug Alcohol Depend 2007
Sporer 2006, http//www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov/n
ews/fentnyl5Fheroin5Fforum,
20Messages for trained overdose responders
- Try to use with others who know what to do if an
overdose happens - Be careful using alone especially if
- Using after abstinence
- Mixing different classes of drugs
- Watch out for your friends, particularly under
risky circumstances
21Recognition
- Overdose responders are taught to be aware of
possible signs of overdose - Nodding versus unresponsive
- Blue lips and nail beds
- Slow breathing, gurgling
- Act Call name, sternal rub rub knuckles hard up
and down breast bone
22Not a replacement for EMS
- Trainees are counselled
- Call 911- My friend is
- unconscious/not breathing
- Give location.
- No need to say heroin or
- overdose
- Police may come
23Rescue breathing
- Many agencies teach mouth to mouth
24Naloxone (Narcan)
- Opioid antagonist which reverses opioid related
sedation and respiratory depression and may cause
withdrawal - Displaces opioids from the receptors, then
occupies the receptor for 30-90 minutes - No psychoactive effects
- Over the counter in Italy
- Routinely used by EMS
25Administration
- Inject into muscle but subcutaneous and
intravenous are also effective - Acts in 2-8 minutes
- If no response in 2-5 minutes repeat
- Lasts 30-90 minutes
26Naloxone preparations
- Injectable
- Inexpensive- 0.25- 1.00 per dose
- Well-documented effectiveness
- Requires injection
- Intranasal
- More expensive 6-9.00 per dose
- Less well-documented
- Easier to use
27Potential Harm?
- Sinking back into overdose when it wears off
- Study of 998 OD patients who were administered
naloxone by EMS and refused to go to the
hospital- none died in the next 12 hours - Using more heroin- naloxone as safety net
- Risks unpleasant abrupt withdrawal
- Vilke Acad Emerg Med 2003
28Safety in the field
- Over 3,500 kits distributed
- 319 overdose reversals reported
- 1 unsuccessful revival
- 1 seizure
- 1 vomited
- Only 5 cases with more than 1 injection
- No cases of re-treatment after naloxone wore off
- Maxwell J Addict Dis 2006
29Harm Reduction
- Emergency Medical Services give
- 1.2- 1.6 milligrams of naloxone which
precipitates severe withdrawal in the dependent
person - Overdose prevention services recommend starting
with 0.4 with an additional dose readily available
30Results awake and breathing
- Narcan wears off in 30-90 minutes
- Overdose responder is counselled to remain with
the overdoser and reassure the overdoser if s/he
is drug sick- the naloxone will wear off- dont
use more heroin to feel better!!
31Opioid maintenance as prevention
- Methadone maintenance may decrease the risk of
overdose by up to 75 - Since the institution of buprenorphine and
methadone maintenance in 1996 in France heroin
overdose has dropped by 79 - Caplehorn 1996, Sporer BMJ 2003, Auriacombe Am J
Addict 2004
32Substitution therapy prevents overdose
French population in 1999 60,000,000
Patients receiving buprenorphine (1998) N 55,000
Patients receiving methadone (1998) N 5,360
Auriacombe et al., 2001
33Opioid maintenance
- Methadone and buprenorphine act to keep tolerance
up- harder to get high but harder to overdose - Both may increase risk of overdosing on other
depressants if taken in high doses
34 Syringe exchange/ access sites rationale
- SEPs serve a high risk population
- SEPs have trusting relationships with drug users
and have expertise in working with drug users
including peer education
35Challenges
- Competition with existing programs for staff and
resources Syringe exchange programs funding and
staff is stretched and has a lot of turnover - Peer educators can be excellent trainers
- Reinforcement of message often possible
- SEPs usually do not have medical personnel able
to prescribe medications on staff - Sharing paid medical staff, use of volunteer
clinicians
36Status of programs
- 14 syringe distribution programs offering
overdose prevention - Over over 2,600 syringe exchange participants,
trained at 14 syringe access sites - Reports of overdose reversals using naloxone
over 250 - SKOOP 3/08
37Drug treatment programs
- New York City Department of Health is promoting
naloxone training and distribution in - Detoxification units
- Methadone programs
- Buprenorphine programs
38Rationale
- Recently detoxified patients are at high risk of
overdose - Methadone buprenorphine patients go in and out
of treatment - These patients are in contact with other drug
users
39Challenges
- May be interpreted as condoning/expecting drug
use - Address it as a community issue- points of
contact - Staff may not see drug users as capable of such
an intervention - Education, drug users may be used to describe
their own experiences - Staff often invested in abstinence model
40Status
- 6 programs have registered all City Hospitals and
several more are preparing to register - 1 methadone program has distributed over 200 kits
41HIV service providers rationale
- Ryan White funding can be used to provide
overdose services in NYC - 42 of cumulative AIDS cases in NYS have
injection drug use or sex with an IDU as a risk
factor - People with advanced disease are at higher risk
of overdose death - Overdose is a major cause of death among PLWHIV
in New York City - NYSDOH, Wang 2005, Sackoff 2006
42Challenges
- Clients possibly not willing to disclose drug use
- Staff lack of experience and knowledge around
drug use issues, discomfort discussing it. - Not all organizations have medical personnel on
staff
43Status of programs
- 6 programs in NYS have registered
- 4 have initiated services
44Shelters for the homeless
- In NYC, leading cause of death among homeless
2005-2006 was OD (23) () - NYC plan
- In 240 city funded shelters, one staff member on
every shift will be trained in overdose response - In 81 facilities with medical providers, will
offer training and intranasal naloxone to all
interested clients - Initial training of medical staff completed
- Training of staff as overdose responders imminent
45Challenges
- Creation of policies and procedures for large
agency with wide diversity in settings - Medical providers not present in all facilities
to dispense naloxone - Needles are not allowed in all shelters
- Fear of repercussions of disclosing drug use
46Status
- 1 shelter implemented training of staff
immediately after legislation passed - Initial training of medical staff completed
- Training of staff as overdose responders imminent
47Hospitals
- Hospitals see patients admitted with drug related
illnesses - Overdose prevention training not only addresses
overdose risk but can build patient-provider
relationship - Program is new with low volume but very
acceptable to medical residents
48Decreasing overdose rates
- Chicago 1999-2003 opioid overdose deaths
decreased 34 coinciding with start up of first
naloxone distribution program - Peak 2000 310
- 2003 205
- Naloxone distribution scaled up 200
- Baltimore 2004 overdose rate down
- San Francisco 2004 overdose rate down while
statewide is up 42 - Scott J Urban Health 2007, 3/28/05 Baltimore
Sun, SFDOH Commission meeting 2005
49Evaluation
- Data is clear that overdose prevention is
feasible, safe and acceptable - Data is emerging that overdose prevention is
effective - Data on how best to reach a wider variety of
users, how best to train and what preparations
are best in different settings
50Early evaluation of SKOOP
- Interviews March 2005- December 2005
- Interviewed 389 of 789 trained OD responders
- Interviewed 122 trained OD responders who
returned for a naloxone refill - Piper, TM et.al. 2007, SKOOP Data
51Characteristics of 389 SKOOP participants
52SKOOP evaluation
- Of 759 trainees from March December 2005
- 71 reported witnessing an overdose
- 50 used naloxone for a total of 82 uses
- 68 were known to have lived 14 unknown outcomes
- 75 reported calling an ambulance
- Markham, in press
53Overdose responders knowledge
- Methods Evaluated 10 current or former opioid
users recruited from each of 6 sites with
naloxone training programs - Baltimore, Maryland San Francisco, California
- Chicago, Illinois New York (Bronx Manhattan)
- New Mexico
- Used validated, reliable knowledge assessment
tool presenting 16 putative overdose scenarios
(Green et al., 2005) - Compared responses of opioid users to those of 11
medical experts in overdose - Green, Heimer, Grau 2007 (under review)
54Overdose responders knowledge
- Naloxone training programs in the US improve
participants recognition response to opioid
overdoses compared to those untrained (plt.001) - Fewer opioid overdoses were missed by trained
participants (plt.05) - Fewer overdoses responded to inappropriately by
trained participants (plt.001) - Trained respondents were as skilled as medical
experts in recognizing opioid overdose situations
(weighted kappa0.85) when naloxone was
indicated (kappa1.0).
55Challenges common in many settings
- Concerns that overdose prevention condones drug
use - Injectable medication not acceptable in all
settings
56Lessons learned
- Implementation of overdose prevention programs
appears to be more acceptable to many agencies
than provision of syringes - Core elements of the training can be adapted to
many settings - Discussion of overdose prevention can contribute
to patient/provider relationship lead to
discussions of drug treatment
57Goals/wish list
- Over the counter status for naloxone
- Overdose prevention training as standard of care
for all at risk of opioid overdose - Inexpensive, effective, intranasal delivery system
58Conclusions
- Overdose prevention training consists of a few
basic components - Overdose prevention by non medical persons is
feasible, safe and probably effective
59Acknowledgements
- Injection Drug Users Health Alliance
- New York City Department of Health and Mental
Hygiene - New York State Department of Health