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    September 24, 2020
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Naloxone has a serious side effect: IT SAVES LIVES. If you're not on a first name basis with Naloxone, you should be. Naloxone (or Narcan) quickly reverses the deadly effects of a narcotic overdose. It can easily be administered by anyone with a simple autoinjector or nasal spray. In Connecticut, you don't even need approval from a doctor to administer Naloxone, and you're protected from prosecution under the state's Good Samaritan laws. If you know someone in danger of an opioid overdose, talk to your physician or pharmacist about gaining access to Naloxone. CHANGE the SCRIPT dmhas DPH WESTBROOK, CT Connectiut Department of Pblic Hath This publication is funded in whole by grants from the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) through the CT Departments of Public Health (DPH) and Mental Health and Addiction Services (DMHASI Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration or HHS. For resources, go to drugfreect.org Naloxone has a serious side effect: IT SAVES LIVES. If you're not on a first name basis with Naloxone, you should be. Naloxone (or Narcan) quickly reverses the deadly effects of a narcotic overdose. It can easily be administered by anyone with a simple autoinjector or nasal spray. In Connecticut, you don't even need approval from a doctor to administer Naloxone, and you're protected from prosecution under the state's Good Samaritan laws. If you know someone in danger of an opioid overdose, talk to your physician or pharmacist about gaining access to Naloxone. CHANGE the SCRIPT dmhas DPH WESTBROOK, CT Connectiut Department of Pblic Hath This publication is funded in whole by grants from the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) through the CT Departments of Public Health (DPH) and Mental Health and Addiction Services (DMHASI Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration or HHS. For resources, go to drugfreect.org