logo

Opioid Harm Prevention

   

Added on  2022-11-16

6 Pages1157 Words221 Views
Running head: OPIOID HARM PREVENTION
1
Opioid Harm Prevention
Name:
Institution:
Tutor:
Date:

OPIOD HARM PREVENTION
2
Opioid Harm Prevention
Often, everyone gets sick in their lifetime. Sickness is quite annoying as it affects the
schedule and well-being of an individual. That is the reason why people seek medical attention
immediately to alleviate the sickness. Little do we know that some of the drugs that can be
prescribed might have long lasting effects. Opioids are such a group of drugs. This is a group of
drugs including heroin, and the artificial synthetic opioids that include fentanyl and the pain
killers prescribed by physicians such as oxycodone, hydrocodone, codeine and morphine. The
World Health Organization report that between 1999 and 2015,183,000 people died from an
overdose of opioids (Ford & Wright, 2017). Furthermore, the center for Disease Control and
Prevention reported in 2012 that 250 million prescriptions of opioids were made in USA alone
compared to the entire population of 319 million people. In Canada, 2000 opioid overdose deaths
have been reported in the province of Ontario from 1991 to 2014 (Hines, Deja, & Black, 2018).
From the statistics, opioids are harmful if taken for the wrong purpose, it is imperative that
necessary strategies are put in place to curb the opioid menace. I totally agree with the fight
against opioid harm prevention because of the following reasons:
Excessive use of opioids leads to death.
It increases the prevalence of blood borne infections such as HIV
Excessive use of opioids leads to dependence.
There are different strategies that can be used to prevent the harm of opioids. There
should be a law that advocates for availability of naloxone. From different randomized controlled
trials, results note that naloxone is one of the drugs that can reverse the effects of opioids. The
North Carolina General assembly in 2013 passed such a law and the outcome has been

OPIOD HARM PREVENTION
3
promising. At the moment, more than 60,000 overdose prevention kits have been dispensed in
North Carolina (Walley, Sisti, Forman, Ruiz, & Xuan, 2017). Besides providing the kit,
education on how to prevent opioid addiction is also provided and this has reduced the harm
associated with opioids by a greater margin. More naloxone should be made available to reverse
the effects of opioids since they are safe and non-addictive drugs.
Needle/exchange programs can be used to prevent the harm of opioids among the drug
users. According to a survey conducted in Carolina back in 2011, results noted that most of the
opioid addicts were using syringes to inject or administer drugs to their bodies. Most of them
were sharing the syringes and this exposes them to the risk of HIV/AIDS. The needle exchange
program can be implemented to prevent the harm of HIV/AIDS since the aim of the initiative is
to provide sterile syringes then collect the used syringes (Wilson, Berk, Adger, & Feldman,
2018). Furthermore, it offers wraparound services like HIV testing then link the participants to
drug treatment programs. The needle exchange program has already been implemented in
different parts such as North Carolina and the outcome has been phenomenal. As of 2018, more
than 1 million syringes have been distributed and 2,600 HIV tests have been conducted.
Furthermore, 3500 people have been referred to different drug treatment programs (Marshall,
Green, Yedinak, & Hadland, 2016). It is advisable that different regions or regions suffering
from opioid addictions should follow suit and incorporate the program in order to alleviate the
harm associated with opioid addiction.
Besides administration of naloxone and needle exchange programs, other strategies
include training those who are affected. It is also necessary to set up pre-arrest diversions. This
involves diverting the drug users to social services where they can be empowered rather than
taking them to jail (Neale & Strang, 2015). Furthermore, more HIV and hepatitis testing services

End of preview

Want to access all the pages? Upload your documents or become a member.

Related Documents
Drug Addiction and Overdose
|7
|1714
|473

Policy Options Task - Safe Injection Sites in Ontario
|10
|2944
|235

Opioid Abuse in Healthcare in US
|14
|3055
|7

Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA) Policy for Opioid Epidemic in the USA
|5
|838
|476

Health Campaign Strategy for Substance Abuse in Teenagers
|5
|1204
|180

Report on Against Legalisation of Opioids
|7
|1432
|42