Latest Drug & Alcohol News

Letting Pharmacists Provide Naloxone Without Prescription Leads to Surge in Access

Latest Drug & Alcohol News


Allowing pharmacists in Ohio to provide the opioid overdose antidote naloxone without a prescription led to a more than 2,000% increase in dispensing of the drug, a new study finds.

State legislators gave Ohio pharmacists permission to dispense naloxone without a prescription in 2015, HealthDay reports. Since then, there has been a 2,328% increase in naloxone dispensing, University of Cincinnati researchers report in JAMA Network Open.

“Our study shows that this change in the Ohio law allowed pharmacists to have more opportunity to participate in the management of patients addicted to opioids,” lead researcher Pam Heaton said in a news release. “Overdoses are not a planned event so during an emergency is not the time to try and access naloxone. The intent is for any adult to be able to go to a pharmacy and purchase naloxone for themselves or for anybody who might need it, so they are adequately prepared to administer a life-saving medication.”