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    FDA Considers Whether Naloxone Devices Should Contain Standard Dose of Drug

    The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will determine whether naloxone devices distributed in communities should contain a standard dose of the opioid overdose antidote, according to U.S. News & World Report.

    Drug companies that make naloxone devices do not agree on how much naloxone should be administered following an opioid overdose, the article notes. The outcome of a meeting this week between the FDA and naloxone makers could change the drug’s pricing and availability. The average price of naloxone has risen from $1 a dose a decade ago to $40 a dose today.

    Naloxone is becoming easier to buy around the country. Most states have passed laws allowing people to buy naloxone without a prescription. Drugstores and other retailers are also making it more easily available. Until recently, naloxone, sold as Narcan, was available mostly through clinics, hospitals or paramedics and other first responders.

    Published

    October 2016