Many public health advocates applaud the surgeon general’s position
Naloxone, which is a drug that can keep drug users alive by reversing opioid overdoses, is viewed by many as the cornerstone of the harm-reduction approach to the epidemic. Experts say people with addiction problems should carry it, and so should their family, friends and acquaintances.
“We want to put it more in reach,” said Traci Green, PhD, an associate professor of emergency medicine and community health sciences at Boston University, who has extensively researched the opioid abuse crisis. “It could not have been a better endorsement.”
Others, including Diane Goodman, who penned a recent Medscape commentary reflecting on the advisory, wonder whether this is a “rational” response to the scourge, since opioid addiction is one of many health problems people might encounter in everyday life and for which treatment options are still limited.
“I’m not sure it makes much more sense than any of us carrying a bottle of nitroglycerin to treat patients with end-stage angina,” wrote Ms. Goodman, an acute-care nurse practitioner.
“What, exactly, are we offering to addicts once their condition has been reversed?” she asked, noting that, without treatment and therapy programs that help wean people from addiction, “the odds of survival for any length of time remain low, no matter how much reversal medication is kept nearby.”