| Literature DB >> 27206486 |
Andrew Deonarine1, Ashraf Amlani1, Graham Ambrose1,2, Jane A Buxton3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The British Columbia take-home naloxone (BCTHN) program has been in operation since 2012 and has resulted in the successful reversal of over 581 opioid overdoses. The study aims to explore BCTHN program participant perspectives about the program, barriers to participants contacting emergency services (calling "911") during an overdose, and perspectives of law enforcement officials on naloxone administration by police officers.Entities:
Keywords: British Columbia; Canada; Law enforcement; Naloxone; Take-home naloxone
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27206486 PMCID: PMC4875634 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-016-0106-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Demographics of participating BCTHN program clients (n = 20)
| Variable | Value |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 11 |
| Female | 9 |
| Mean age (years) | |
| All clients | 49 |
| Male | 51 |
| Female | 46 |
| Education | |
| Grade 10 or less | 8 |
| Grades 11–12 | 6 |
| Post-secondary | 4 |
| Unknown | 2 |
| Duration of drug use | |
| <21 years | 4 |
| 21–30 years | 6 |
| 31–40 years | 6 |
| >40 years | 2 |
| Unknown | 2 |
Fig. 1Map of British Columbia showing sites from where the study participants were recruited
General themes that emerged from focus groups and interviews with BCTHN naloxone administrators
| Theme | Example |
|---|---|
| Saving lives in the community | “Well we were in an environment where there [were] a lot of lives to be saved so we found it quite beneficial.” |
| Simple to understand educational content | “Everything was right to the point, what we needed to know and how to use the Narcan kit and how to use, how to open this little bottle without getting cut by your, on your fingers when you open it. So everything was useful in the training.” |
| Accessibility to people with limited reading skills/illiteracy | “I have problems reading, I am dyslexic. People I know that but, the session itself was really informative and she read it to us and she pointed to it as she was reading it and like explained how to do it, take care of it, physically how, because that’s how I learn things too is by visual.” |
| Integration into the community | “Round here, most people know who has it usually or they just yell out right, if someone needs it, they just yell out who’s got a kit, right?” |
| Positive interaction with emergency responders | “I called 911 twice and this was at work, at [agency name]. I naloxoned the one girl and the ambulance came and [said] I did good. And then the second time the police and ambulance came and I did good again, had them all up and ready and they’re like did you do healthcare and I’m like no, I just learned, I’m a self-learner.” |
| Correcting misperceptions about naloxone | “But people generally are, they accept it with open, with an open mind because – but you know what has misled a lot of people is that movie Pulp Fiction…. Where Buddy gets the adrenalin shot in the heart eh, and people are under the misunderstanding that that was Naloxone or Narcan. So I’ve straightened quite a few people out that have seen that movie.” |
THN program participant and law enforcement official perspectives on the themes of warrants, kit confiscation, and arrests
| Theme | THN participants | Law enforcement officials |
|---|---|---|
| Exercising arrest warrants | “Right away he bolted because he thought 911 had been called and he might have had a warrant and that’s their biggest fear right, they don’t want the police involved. Ambulance, they’re not, they’re not so, it doesn’t matter so much about the ambulance, like they’ll go to the hospital if the ambulance is there. If it’s not there don’t bother, I’m alive now.” | “Typically if we go to an overdose call, it, the fact that somebody’s overdosed doesn’t give us a right in order we just search everybody in the vicinity. I mean really our primary responsibility of this call is to preserve the life of somebody that’s overdosed (right). I, my experience is that the people that are around aren’t necessarily in any peril. I mean we do have to know the last names, etcetera and really unless somebody there happens to have a warrant for their arrest, well I don’t in my experience know that other people that are at the scene are being searched or arrested or detained, or you know unless there’s some reasonable ground that you know that it was you know forcefully administered or you know or anything else they had. I mean that is such a rarity.” |
| Arrest for illegal activity (possession, breach of probation, etc.) | “Yeah, police because then like what were you doing when you were coming, what are you doing in this area or were you buying drugs too, so then what if I get in trouble and they start questioning me and them I’m involved for giving her the naloxone, the person the naloxone, and I’m like shit, I was just walking by trying to save a life.” | “But generally, if it’s a medical call, like if, like that’ll, I believe that’ll get fire and ambulance, ambulance for sure, but usually fire tags along for anything. But they’ll go and then I guess if there’s a dangerous circumstance, they’ll call police to assist. What you hear often over police radio is ambulance is attending for an overdose, police [aren’t?] required, just so you’re aware, and then a Sergeant will go, okay, and then that’ll be that, no one’ll go because it’s, it’s kind of fallen now into the realm that even though the drug that was used was illegal, it’s a medical call because where they’re at now is medical…” |
| Responder concerns and kit confiscation | “… the first responders showed up and there was, I believe it was an ambulance or a fire, but the guy started yelling at me ‘cause I had the needle in my hand, so I just yelled back at him, for like you know I’m totally, it’s legal for me to have this, why are you mad? Because you can’t carry it? You know so that was probably maybe twice in a situation like that where I‘ve had first responders you know say shit like that to me. Otherwise, nobody’s said anything.” | “I would probably say that if that’s [kit confiscation] happened, it would probably be inexperience of an officer. I mean the Naloxone kits are given by prescription so they can have them, I mean they have no, people can’t get high off them. … I mean we have no business taking those things, that’s those are all measures to preserve their life and health.” |
Opposing views on the possible role that police officers can play concerning naloxone administration
| “My concern would be that if it’s given to the police, you’re kind of getting into that quasi-territory of cross-training which I know hasn’t always been successful, such as like are you a police officer or you’re a paramedic because generally, [our police officers] rely heavily on their co-relationship with EHS [Emergency Health Services] so if like police officers were to carry kits…” |
Potential concerns about liability discussed by a law enforcement official
| “I can see a plethora of issues arising, primarily to do with liability … You know I, the liability issue, in all honesty, that’s I’m sure someone’ll work that out. I’m a, I’m a lowly patrol constable so at that level I could see it being beneficial. … And we’ve recently started carrying tourniquets and you know is there medical concerns if we administer the [inaudible], we’re acting in good faith so you get that kind of pass all.” |
Concerns about the technicalities of naloxone administration
| “The reservations would be that because we’re big city policing, we are, ambulance is always just a moment away, so they say, so for that well then you’re kind of making a decision, am I going to take this medical concern into my own hands, am I properly identifying the issue as an overdose or is the guy having a seizure and this is going to kill him, or I can wait 30 seconds until the ambulance comes, which is fine, which is current practice. I know that generally VPD doesn’t do too much medical, just [inaudible] the primary goal is to get EHS or ambulance there as soon as possible and some very bare bones stuff, so I could see that being complicated. That’s kind of the big decision going in [inaudible] do it now or wait the minute ‘til trained medical personnel can do it. I’ve never given a needle so…” |