One of the most devastating news stories of 2015 has been the growing heroin epidemic in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says heroin use has more than doubled among young adults ages 18–25, and the rate of overdose deaths from opioids has gone up 200 percent. Mayo Clinic addiction specialist Dr. Jon Ebbert says supporting treatment and prevention efforts are important, as is making the prescription drug naloxone available to help reverse heroin overdoses. Vivien Williams has more. Video Rating: / 5
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the United States is in the midst of a drug overdose epidemic. In their Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), the CDC reports that last year, overdose killed more than 45-thousand people, most of whom had taken opioids – heroin or prescription medications such as oxycodone. They also report that since 2000, the death rate from overdoses involving opioid pain relievers and heroin increased 200 percent. Mayo Clinic addiction specialist Dr. Jon Ebbert says, “We are in the middle of an opioid crisis. As a society we need to invest more in mental health, and we need to invest more in drug treatment.”
Dr. Ebbert supports the use of naloxone, a medication recently approved by the Food and Drug Administration to reverse opioid overdose. Overdose results when an opioid drug slows a person’s breathing to the point of respiratory failure. “To put it simply, naloxone works by removing the opioid molecules that suppress respiration and helps people breathe again. It wakes them up. I like to say that naloxone revives people, but treatment saves them.”
Dr. Ebbert says opioid medications are often necessary for the proper treatment and management of pain. He believes physicians must assess patients carefully and provide adequate monitoring and follow up for patients on opioid medications. He also encourages easier access to naloxone and the support of effective treatment for people addicted to any type of opioid drug.
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More than 1,500 people die each year in Ohio from a drug overdose. Now, we have a way to prevent many of those deaths. Naloxone, also known as Narcan can reverse an overdose that is caused by an opioid drug. Nationwide Children’s Hospital is helping families with children addicted to these drugs by prescribing a drug overdose kit with Narcan. Watch here how it works.
Connect with a specialist: http://bit.ly/1KepsHo
Learn more about medication assisted treatment: http://bit.ly/1KepTBs
Meet the team: http://bit.ly/1Keq4fY
Meet Steven Matson, MD: http://bit.ly/1KeqbrU
This video offers step by step instructions on how to assemble a drug overdose kit provide by Nationwide Children’s Hospital. The kit has a 95 to 100 percent success rate if used properly. The kit must be prescribed by a physician and only works on opioids.