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Health officials push to make Narcan more accessible as support pours in for Demi Lovato

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There has been an outpouring of support for singer Demi Lovato, after the singer was rushed to the hospital Tuesday for apparent overdose.

Experts say news of this incident could be a chance to help even more people struggling with opioid addiction.

The National Safety Council says Lovato’s reported revival with Narcan, an overdose reversal medicine, “tells us that substance misuse stories can end with hope rather than tragedy.”

In a statement, the group said, “while Ms. Lovato was reportedly given Narcan by emergency responders, our law enforcement and emergency professionals are not the only people who can administer it.”

The group is calling for increased access to the drug, as U.S. Surgeon General Jerome M. Adams, M.D., M.P.H. has done in the past saying, “anyone can administer it without fear of an adverse outcome. It poses no threat to someone who might not be overdosing. The only thing naloxone will do is save a life.

 

Dr. Aaron Wolfe with Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center supported that notion.

“For example, if somebody is having an allergic reaction and has to use an EpiPen, there are some complications with that,” Wolfe says. “For example, someone could stick themselves with a needle. Here you don't even have to worry about that; you’re just injecting some medicine into somebody’s nose, or really just squirting it. There’s no needle involved; it’s just spraying medicine in somebody’s nose.”

The National Safety Council says there’s no silver bullet for ending our country’s opioid crisis, but the organization says naloxone provides a silver lining.