Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Health

FDA tells doctors to discuss overdose antidote with patients

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jul, 2020 10:49 PM
  • FDA tells doctors to discuss overdose antidote with patients

Doctors who prescribe opioid painkillers should tell their patients about a potentially life-saving medication that can reverse drug overdoses, according to new federal guidelines issued Thursday.

The move by the Food and Drug Administration is the latest government effort to increase use of the drug naloxone, which can counteract the effects of an opioid overdose in minutes. Best known by the brand name Narcan, the drug is available as a nasal spray, injection and automatic injector.

Prescribing instructions for all opioids, such as Percocet and OxyContin, will recommend doctors discuss how to get the overdose-reversal drug, which can be obtained from pharmacists without a prescription. For patients with a higher risk of overdose, such as those with a history of opioid addiction, doctors should consider prescribing naloxone alongside the opioid. The same recommendations will appear on drugs used to control opioid addiction, such as methadone.

Nearly 71,000 Americans died of drug overdoses last year, a new record driven in part by fentanyl and other illegal opioids.

State and local officials have been handing out naloxone to police, first responders and families of people with a history of drug addiction in an attempt to reverse the multi-decade wave of opioid overdoses. Critics of the practice argue that giving it to pain patients does not address the growing share of fatal overdoses caused by illicit opioids.

Opioid medications can be addictive and dangerous even when used under doctors’ orders, though they are also an accepted tool to treat severe pain from serious injuries, surgery and cancer. Prescriptions have been falling in the U.S. since 2012, pressured by new laws and prescribing limits from state and local governments, insurers and hospital systems. Those limits restrict the number of pills, refills and who can prescribe opioids.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Your Slim Figure Is Because Of Your Skinny Genes

Your Slim Figure Is Because Of Your Skinny Genes
The study, led by University of Cambridge researchers, looked at why some people manage to stay thin while others easily gain weight.    

Your Slim Figure Is Because Of Your Skinny Genes

Here's The Secret To Maintaining Weight Loss

This is because eating fewer carbohydrates increases the number of calories burned, said the study published in the journal BMJ.   

Here's The Secret To Maintaining Weight Loss

Low Carb? Low Fat? What The Latest Dieting Studies Tell Us

Low Carb? Low Fat? What The Latest Dieting Studies Tell Us
If you're planning to try to lose weight in 2019, you're sure to find a fierce debate online and among friends and family about how best to do it. It seems like everyone has an opinion, and new fads emerge every year.

Low Carb? Low Fat? What The Latest Dieting Studies Tell Us

Women With Slim Hips May Develop Diabetes, Heart Attacks

Women With Slim Hips May Develop Diabetes, Heart Attacks
While putting on weight is dangerous for health, women who have slim hips could be at risk of diabetes and heart attacks, finds a new research.

Women With Slim Hips May Develop Diabetes, Heart Attacks

Keep Your Skin Radiant In Vegan Way

Keep Your Skin Radiant In Vegan Way
With the onset of winter, skin also begins to change and transform. To rescue and protect it from the ever so changing weather and hydration drenched condition vegan skin care products and regime acts as a supernatural power.

Keep Your Skin Radiant In Vegan Way

Higher BMI May Lower Your Mental, Physical Health

Higher BMI May Lower Your Mental, Physical Health
There is a growing need to prevent obesity as a new study has found that higher body mass index (BMI) may impact your mental as well as physical health.

Higher BMI May Lower Your Mental, Physical Health