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A national survey of law enforcement post-overdose response efforts

Bradley Ray, N. J. Richardson, Peyton R. Attaway, Hope Smiley McDonald, Peter J. Davidson, Alex H. Kral

2023The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse17 citationsDOI

Abstract

Background: Law enforcement agencies in the US have provided naloxone to officers and developed initiatives to follow-up after a non-fatal overdose. However, the prevalence and characteristics of these efforts have yet to be documented in research literature.Objectives: We sought to understand the national prevalence of naloxone provision among law enforcement and examine the implementation of post-overdose follow-up.Methods: We administered a survey on drug overdose response initiatives using a multimodal approach (online and mail) to a nationally representative sample of law enforcement agencies (N = 2,009; 50.1% response rate) drawn from the National Directory of Law Enforcement Administrators database. We further examine a subsample of agencies (N = 1,514) that equipped officers with naloxone who were also asked about post-overdose follow-up.Results: We found 81.7% of agencies reported officers were equipped with naloxone; among these, approximately one-third (30.3%) reported follow-up after an overdose. More than half (56.8%) of agencies indicated partnership in follow-up with emergency medical services as the most common partner (68.8%). There were 21.4% of agencies with a Quick Response Team, a popular national post-overdose model, and were more likely to indicate partnership with a substance use disorder treatment provider than when agencies were asked generally about partners in follow-up (74.5% and 26.2% respectively).Conclusion: Many law enforcement agencies across the US have equipped officers with naloxone, and about one-third of those are conducting follow-up to non-fatal overdose events. Post-overdose follow-up models and practices vary in ways that can influence treatment engagement and minimize harms against persons who use drugs.

Topics & Concepts

Opioid overdoseLaw enforcement(+)-NaloxoneGeneral partnershipMedicineDirectoryEnforcementDrug overdosePoison controlMedical emergencyBusinessPolitical scienceLawOpioidOperating systemInternal medicineComputer scienceReceptorOpioid Use Disorder TreatmentSuicide and Self-Harm StudiesSubstance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes
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