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Opioid Overdose Drug Becoming More Common In Ohio Schools

The U.S. Surgeon General has issued an advisory, encouraging more Americans to carry the opioid overdose antidote naloxone.

It is regularly carried by firefighters, paramedics and police officers. The antidote is also becoming more and more common in Ohio schools. Ashton Marra of member station WCPN in Cleveland reports. 

Students at David Anderson Junior and Senior High School in Lisbon, Ohio, file into the auditorium on a Thursday morning. A student group has organized a day of workshops for their classmates about making good decisions, and it starts with a visit from an inmate at the Columbiana County Jail. Brandi is 24-years-old, pregnant with her fifth child, and awaiting sentencing for crimes she says she committed to feed her addiction.

 

“Once you do it, you’re chasing your high and it’s not fun because it becomes a physical addiction to where you will get sick if you don’t have it so you’re constantly chasing it.”

 

The rural school district near the Pennsylvania border serves about 900 students in a county where the number of drug overdose deaths doubled between 2015 and 2016.

 

Lisbon Exempted Village Superintendent Joe Siefke says, like much of the state, his county has an opioid problem. That’s why they’re focusing more time on educating students about the risks of drug use, like at the morning assembly. It’s also why, just last month, they began supplying their school nurse with a new medication.

 

“It’s right here.”

 

Nurse Kella Haren unlocks the cabinet where she keeps student prescriptions, some over the counter medicines like aspirin, and her two dose kit of Narcan. Narcan is an opioid antagonist, a nasal spray that within minutes can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose.

 

“So, somebody that’s got a slower respiratory rate. They might be a little limp, like their muscle tone’s not right, and blue. Blue lips.”

 

Haren and a select group of Lisbon school employees-- the athletic director, guidance counselor and principals-- were trained on how to administer the drug. But Superintendent Siefke says the likelihood that staff will use Narcan to revive a student is slim.

 

“Our vision is having things available for those off hour activities because we are such an open facility for our community and loved ones are coming in, seeing their kids perform, doing multiple things. Our main concern was not only during the school hours, but during the off hours.”

 

Lisbon is one of the latest Ohio school districts to stock the antidote. Dublin City Schools, near Columbus, it’s had Narcan in all 19 of its buildings since 2016.

 

“I don’t have any quantitative data to share, but I’m very sure we were the first school system in Ohio to adopt it.”

 

Dublin Deputy Superintendent Tracey Miller says the district of 16,000 students has taken a slightly different approach to Narcan training. Miller says hundreds of employees- from teachers to coaches to custodians- know how to use the nasal spray that has no negative health effects if administered to someone who’s not experiencing an opioid overdose.
 

“What we didn’t want is for someone to begin showing signs of an overdose and then, all of a sudden, they’re like okay, who’s trained to do this? Who’s trained to do this? And then, what if that designated person, whoever that is, what if they weren’t available? Well the answer is we want everybody to be trained to do this.”

 

In Miller’s Franklin County, overdose deaths increased by nearly 50 percent from 2016 to 2017, and Miller says his community fully supported the local board of education’s position to stock the antidote. But that wasn’t the case for Akron City Schools last year.

 

“We had people on one side saying we were encouraging kids to use those drugs and overdose.”

 

Dan Rambler is the director of student support services for Akron schools.

 

“That I think is a fairly ridiculous statement.”

 

Rambler equates Narcan to fire extinguishers. They’re not there to encourage students to light fires, but are in every school in case of an emergency.

 

“Human life is important, regardless if people make horrible choices or not. You still save them, you still keep them alive, you try to get them to be better.”

 

There’s no central database tracking the number of Ohio schools that have Narcan on their campuses because it’s supplied in different ways. Lisbon Schools got its kits for free through an Ohio Department of Health Program. In Akron, the high school Narcan kits were provided by a pharmaceutical company and the district paid $100 each for the 8 in the middle schools. And in Dublin, the Board of Education purchased more than 20 of the $50 kits on its own.

 

So far, all three districts say they haven’t had to use the overdose reversing drug. But they’re glad they have it. Just in case.

 

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