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The Takeaway

Narcan: How To Save a Life

The Takeaway

WNYC and PRX

Politics, Wnyc, Daily News, Radio, Takeaway, National, News, News Commentary

4.6716 Ratings

🗓️ 17 May 2023

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The mounting death toll from the opioid crisis in the United States continues to wreak havoc in cities, towns, and rural communities across the nation. Over the past two decades, the number of people dying from opioid overdoses in New York, and across the United States, are rising each year.  But there is something that some public health experts say could help. Narcan, the brand name for the drug naloxone, is an overdose prevention tool that anyone can use. It’s a simple nasal spray, it's legal, it’s pretty quick and easy to learn how to use, and it can reverse the effects of opioid overdose, and potentially save a life. In March, the Food and Drug Administration authorized over the counter sales of Narcan, making a potentially live-saving drug even more widely available. A CDC study from 2020 found that nearly 40 percent of overdose deaths occurred while another person was nearby — which means the more people carrying Narcan, the better chance there is of saving a life. Takeaway producer Katerina Barton reports, and spoke with Joanna Kaufman, a nursing student, full spectrum doula and priestess in training, living in Santa Fe, New Mexico, whose brother, Benjamin, died in 2019 from a fatal opioid overdose. Katerina also received a Narcan training from Elena Rotov, an overdose prevention coordinator, Hep C/HIV tester, and Hep C coordinator at the Brooklyn-based harm reduction center After Hours Project. Narcan is currently accessible and mostly distributed outside of the traditional health care system from nonprofits and harm reduction organizations. It is also available in some states at participating pharmacies. Most cities offer free community Narcan trainings, where you will receive a free dose of Narcan, and you can also find trainings at nonprofits and harm reduction organizations near you, and online.New York City Public Overdose Prevention Programs

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey, Lulu here, whether we are romping through science, music, politics, technology, or feelings,

0:05.9

we seek to leave you seeing the world anew.

0:09.0

Radio Lab adventures right on the edge of what we think we know, wherever you get podcasts.

0:15.0

Thanks for being with us on The Takeaway. I'm M.HP.

0:18.2

This weekend in Portland, Oregon, eight people died from overdose as a result of fentanyl poisoning.

0:25.9

Were it a gun crime? We call it a massacre. Yet it's only a tiny fraction of the mounting

0:32.5

death toll from opioid overdoses that continues to wreak havoc in cities, towns, and rural communities across

0:39.6

the nation. But there's something we can do. And by we, I mean, you, me, all of us,

0:48.4

who with a little planning and training just might make a life-saving difference.

0:53.8

In March, the Food and Drug Administration authorized over-the-counter sales of Narcan.

0:59.6

That's the easily administered drug that can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.

1:05.2

It's a decision that could save many lives.

1:09.2

So for our show's very last takeaway reports, producer

1:13.7

Katarina Barton set out to learn more. Hi, how are you doing? Good. Oh my God. It's so good to see you.

1:21.9

It's been so many years. I know. It's been so long.

1:34.2

This is Joanna Kaufman. We were friends in high school in Santa Fe, New Mexico, but we haven't talked in a few years.

1:41.0

I'm a nursing student, full spectrum doula, and priestess in training living in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

1:51.3

We both had younger brothers around the same age. Ben was an amazing young man. He was really soft-spoken, really kind, really compassionate. He could never pass somebody on the street

2:00.5

without offering something, whether it was like food or some money, if somebody was in need.

2:07.9

He, I feel like he really felt the world.

2:11.9

He loved animals.

2:13.6

He just had a heart of gold.

...

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