Optimizing Naloxone Access Through Group Purchasing
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As the United States continues to grapple with the ongoing overdose crisis, it is increasingly important that policymakers look to effective harm reduction tools that can save lives right now.
Executive Summary
Last year, the United States saw more than 100,000 overdose deaths—the majority of which involved synthetic opioids such as fentanyl. Many of those deaths could have been prevented if the people most likely to experience or witness an overdose—people who use drugs—had better access to the overdose reversal medication naloxone.
Harm reduction organizations have been key distributors of naloxone since the mid-1990s, despite considerable barriers related to cost and naloxone’s prescription status. Grassroots buyers clubs emerged to help overcome these challenges, and even as they have evolved over the past decade, group purchasing remains a cornerstone of naloxone procurement for harm reduction organizations. Nonetheless, most legislative and regulatory efforts, while well intentioned, have overlooked this aspect of naloxone access, leaving much room for improvement.
In this paper, we integrate a review of the scientific literature with findings from a survey of harm reduction organizations and interviews with several individuals familiar with harm reduction and naloxone group purchasing to describe the emergence of naloxone group purchasing, explain its role in facilitating naloxone access, and discuss how policy can improve this important resource.
Read the full study, “Optimizing Naloxone Access Through Group Purchasing.”