A new consultation on expanding access to naloxone—which reverses the effects of opioid overdoses—to homeless shelters and other key locations has been launched by the UK government.1 Part of the plan ...
An anti-overdose drug is to be made more widely available without a prescription. Nurses, paramedics, police officers and probation workers will all be able to supply naloxone for vulnerable people to ...
LEXINGTON — The University of Kentucky College of Pharmacy announced a major outreach initiative Thursday aimed at training pharmacists across the state for the prescription use of naloxone, a ...
The University of Kentucky has announced an initiative to train pharmacists on the use of a drug that can reverse the effects of a heroin overdose.The UK College of Pharmacy announced the statewide ...
Dramatic footage shows the first time UK police inject a heroin addict with a potentially life-saving drug - only to discover the man was just asleep. West Midlands Police is the first force in the ...
LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) - Unfortunately, overdoses are not foreign to college students. That is why the HEALing Communities Study team at the University of Kentucky implemented naloxone (name brand ...
A new campaign is being launched to increase public awareness of a life-saving treatment which can reverse a drugs overdose. The Scottish government and Scottish Drugs Forum (SDF) have teamed up to ...
New York, Oct. 25, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Naloxone Spray Global Market Report 2021: COVID-19 Implications And ...
New York, March 03, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Reportlinker.com announces the release of the report "Naloxone Spray Global Market Report 2022" - https://www ...
It has been a year since a change in UK law made it legal for a heroin antidote to be given by anyone who might encounter someone dying of an overdose. The antidote, naloxone, can be given by friends ...
Every Kenton County inmate who's released from jail is getting a chance to get a naloxone kit provided through a University of Kentucky research project to study and stem overdoses in the community.
The anti-overdose drug naloxone is to be made more widely available without a prescription, the Government has announced. Professionals, including nurses, paramedics, police officers and probation ...