Home > Can we really say naloxone reduces the overall rate of overdose deaths?

Drug and Alcohol Findings. (2018) Can we really say naloxone reduces the overall rate of overdose deaths? Drug and Alcohol Findings Research Analysis,

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External website: https://findings.org.uk/PHP/dl.php?file=McDonald_R...


How confident can we be that take-home naloxone programmes are effective without the ‘gold standard’ randomised trial? Judged against nine criteria for establishing the presumption of causality, evidence that the provision of naloxone reduces overdose-related deaths among opioid users.

 

Key points from summary and commentary

  • The featured review assessed the impact of take-home naloxone programmes using the nine Bradford Hill criteria – a well-established method for establishing the likelihood of a ‘cause and effect’ relationship between an intervention and an outcome where it is not possible to allocate participants at random to an intervention versus a comparator.
  • This method demonstrated that provision of the overdose antidote naloxone to people who are not healthcare workers is likely to be an effective way of preventing overdose-related deaths.
  • Take-home naloxone has led to improved survival rates among programme participants and reduced heroin overdose mortality rates in the community, and is accompanied by only a low rate of adverse events. 

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