Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Naloxone Affordability At Center Of White House Summit With Drugmakers
White House officials met with pharmaceutical company representatives Tuesday in an effort to address long-standing concerns about the affordability of overdose-reversal drugs that the Biden administration views as crucial to saving lives amid the nation鈥檚 raging opioid crisis. The meeting was held with representatives from 10 companies, including Emergent BioSolutions, which later this summer will start selling without a prescription an overdose-reversal drug called naloxone. Critics have slammed Emergent for plans to price the nasal spray, sold under the brand name Narcan, at 鈥渓ess than $50鈥 per two-dose kit, which they say is too expensive for many people, let alone those who regularly use drugs. (Ovalle, 6/20)
For years, public health guidance about opioid overdoses has been relatively simple: Administer naloxone, then call 911. But the days of simply spraying naloxone into an overdose victim鈥檚 nose, then watching that person resume breathing and wake up within minutes, are over. (Facher, 6/21)
Also 鈥
The Democratic-led Maine Senate narrowly voted down a bill on Tuesday to allow 鈥渟afe injection sites鈥 that are beginning to emerge nationally to fight opioid overdose deaths but remain federally illegal. Senators voted 18-16 against a measure from Rep. Grayson Lookner, D-Portland, that would allow cities and towns to approve sites where people could use heroin and other illegal drugs under the supervision of medical staff who could revive them if they overdose. (Shepherd, 6/20)
Los Angeles County public health officials on Tuesday issued an alert warning Angelenos that some pharmacies in Mexico have been selling counterfeit medications containing fentanyl and other narcotics. 鈥淭he landscape of overdose deaths no longer primarily affects those who are using substances regularly,鈥 the alert said. 鈥淒ue to fentanyl, we are seeing people overdose and die the first time they try an illicit substance or counterfeit pill.鈥 (Blakinger and Sheets, 6/20)
Opioids, including heroin, prescription pills and fentanyl, have caused the most overdose deaths in Texas, according to a Texas Health and Human Services report that studied death certificate data from 2010 to 2019. And because opioids are often mixed with other drugs, there鈥檚 been a rise in deaths known as polysubstance overdoses. The most recent state data shows those deaths reaching a rate of four per 100,000 people in 2019.The most prevalent drug combinations were commonly prescribed pills, like hydrocodone and oxycodone, mixed with depressants like benzodiazepines and psychostimulants that include amphetamine and methamphetamine. (Simpson, 6/19)
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News: What You Need To Know About The Opioid Settlement Funds聽
The money, which comes from companies like Purdue Pharma, McKesson, CVS, and others that made, distributed, and sold opioid painkillers, 聽is meant as restitution for their roles in fueling the epidemic. 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News senior correspondent Aneri Pattani breaks down the money鈥檚 path 鈥 from when it lands to how it鈥檚 spent. (Pattani, Norman and Tempest, 6/21)