Opioid Blocking Nasal Sprays Bill Passes Out of Committees

Sacramento – Assemblymember Matt Haney’s (D-San Francisco) legislation requiring opioid blocker nasal sprays to be kept in specific businesses has passed out of the Assembly Health and Assembly Judiciary Committees. AB 24 received unanimous support from both Democrats and Republicans.

AB 24  will require opioid blocker nasal sprays–also commonly known as naloxone or by the brand name Narcan–to be kept in an area accessible to employees in gas stations, bars, libraries, and single room occupancy hotels (SROs), along with posters describing how to identify an overdose. Opioid blockers would only be required in counties experiencing an opioid crisis and would be dispersed through the mail, free of charge, by the California Department of Public Health.

“If fentanyl continues to be cheaper and more accessible than opioid blockers we’re going to keep seeing an increase in overdose deaths,” said Haney. “Until we can cut off the source of fentanyl, we have a responsibility to make sure that the only effective first aid response is always there when it’s needed.”

AB 24 is based upon similar public health interventions that require emergency tools—like first aid kits and fire extinguishers—to be posted in public locations. Cal/OSHA will check for compliance during regular inspections.

Dec 20, 2022: Law to Require Opioid Blocking Nasal Spray in Gas Stations, Bars and Libraries

California is now reaching new levels of the opioid crisis. Experts say that because of the availability of the new synthetic opioid fentanyl, opioid deaths have skyrocketed to 6800 in 2021. Even more terrifying is that fentanyl is now getting into the hands of youth. A staggeringone out of every five California youths aged 15 to 24 who died in 2021 were killed by a fentanyl overdose.

The California Department of Justice, under Attorney General Rob Bonta, has seized over 4 million fentanyl pills and almost 900 pounds of fentanyl powder since last spring. “Stopping fentanyl from entering our communities must be a top priority for law enforcement,” said Assemblymember Haney. “But fentanyl is so cheap to make and so addictive that it’s spreading at a rate that will only get worse before it gets better. We have to aggressively go after the supply, but at the same time we have to immediately escalate our public health response to save lives.”

“The good news is that a fentanyl overdose can be completely reversed in 30 seconds by using an opioid blocker nasal spray as a first aid treatment,” said Dr. Paula Whitemen MD, FACEP, FAAP who spoke on the importance of opioid blockers at the most recent American College of Emergency Physician Scientific Assembly. “The medication binds to the same receptors in the brain used by opioids and reverses or blocks the drug. There are no side effects and they are completely safe to use even if it turns out the person is having a medical issue other than an overdose.’’

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