Limited Supply of Narcan Prevents Milwaukee Groups From Saving Lives
Vending machines aren't available after hours, or are even turned off during the day.
As soon as Rafael Mercado gets word in his southside neighborhood that people are overdosing on a bad batch of fentanyl-laced drugs, he races to distribute Narcan before more lives are lost.
Narcan, a drug used to reverse the effects of opioid overdoses, is in short supply in Milwaukee. This worries advocates like Mercado who distribute the life-saving drug.
“We’ll take Narcan if we have it and fentanyl test strips and post up at the hot spots on National and Greenfield Avenue,” Mercado said. “We can’t hit the streets without Narcan or with minimal supplies of it.”
He said obtaining doses of Narcan, the brand name for naloxone medication and a key tool in slowing the pace of drug overdose deaths, is a challenge in the city for groups like his that support individuals who use opioids.
Mercado is not alone, according to Desilynn Smith, clinical director at Gateway to Change, a treatment center located at 2319 W. Capitol Dr.
She also is the executive director at Uniting Garden Homes Inc., 4201 N. 27th St., a nonprofit that provides support to families and hosts Narcan training events.
“There are many agencies that need [Narcan] that don’t have it or don’t have enough,” Smith said. “We need enough of it to saturate the community if we want to save more lives.”
Grim pace of overdose deaths continues
From Jan. 1 to Oct. 28, there were 362 confirmed drug overdose deaths, with 183 suspected cases pending toxicology in Milwaukee County, according to data provided by Karen Domagalski, operations manager for the Medical Examiner’s Office.
If all the pending cases are confirmed as drug overdose deaths, the total this year would jump to 545, nearly identical to last year’s total of 547 through the same period. In 2022, Milwaukee County recorded a record high 665 drug overdose deaths.
Narcan not always available
Mercado said his group obtains Narcan through several different avenues, none of which is always accessible.
One option, he said, is to pick up doses from the city’s 11 Narcan vending machines, but, he said, many are not open after hours or accessible at all.
A recent visit by NNS to a vending site at 1615 S. 22nd St. revealed that while the vending machine was filled with supplies, it wasn’t turned on.
“The machines are supposed to be accessible 24 hours a day, but that’s not always the case,” Mercado said. “Regardless, not everyone can get to these sites.”
The program is available to county human service departments; local health departments; tribal health clinics or their designees; syringe-exchange programs; programs with recovery coaches and certified peer specialists; and state-certified opioid treatment programs.
While many organizations, including local participants such as the United Community Center, Vivent Health, and the Milwaukee Health Department, are eligible for and participate in the Narcan Direct Program, those stipulations leave out other organizations such as Team HAVOC.
Capt. Gregory Miller, mobile integrated health care manager for the Milwaukee Fire Department, said his agency is no longer eligible for the Narcan Direct Program.
“We were prior to this year, but we’re not allowed to renew,” he said.
Miller, who helps oversee the Milwaukee Overdose Response Initiative, a partnership between the Fire Department, Milwaukee Health Department and other community partners, said the change resulted in low supplies of Narcan for a time.
The Leave Behind Program provides emergency medical service providers funds to purchase Narcan and fentanyl test strips.
Smith’s organizations, Gateway to Change and Uniting Garden Homes, are also both ineligible for the Narcan Direct Program and rely on the Milwaukee Health Department and Wisconsin Voices for Recovery, a Madison-based organization, for the Narcan they distribute.
“We’ve run into situations where we don’t have it and can’t meet that immediate need,” Smith said.
Another issue is that there’s simply not enough Narcan available locally, said Courtney Geiger, who was the public health strategist, specializing in overdose and substance use disorder prevention for the City of Milwaukee Health Department at the time she was interviewed by NNS. She resigned from that position on Oct. 26.
“In Milwaukee, there’s not enough [Narcan] to get out the doors and not enough for all agencies,” said Geiger, adding that the city received 1,200 doses of Narcan through the Narcan Direct Program this year and submitted a request to obtain 6,000 in the next cycle.
Despite the challenges, there are still places to find Narcan in Milwaukee, such as purchasing it at a pharmacy or going to any local fire station to receive a Hope Kit, which contains the drug and fentanyl test strips.
While those options can be helpful, Mercado said not having an ample supply on hand isn’t ideal when you’re racing to save lives.
“I get it when I can, but when I run out, I’m stuck because people need it and I can’t provide it,” he said.
Challenges in Narcan distribution hamper efforts to slow pace of drug overdose deaths was originally published by the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service.
More about the Opioid Crisis
- Serenity Inns: A Proven Lifesaving Facility Denied Critical State Funding - Serenity Inns - Nov 19th, 2024
- Milwaukee County Outreach Team Going Door-to-Door Handing Out Narcan in High Overdose Areas - Evan Casey - Nov 14th, 2024
- DHS Launches New System to Help Communities Track and Respond to Overdose - Wisconsin Department of Health Services - Nov 14th, 2024
- Attorney General Kaul and Bipartisan Coalition of 30 States Announce Settlement with Kroger Over Opioid Crisis - Wisconsin Department of Justice - Nov 6th, 2024
- Baldwin Calls on Biden Administration to Investigate China’s Role in Fueling the Fentanyl Crisis - U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin - Oct 23rd, 2024
- Baldwin Brings Home $750,000 for Northeastern Wisconsin to Combat Fentanyl and Opioid Epidemic - U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin - Sep 27th, 2024
- AG Kaul Meets with EMS Leave Behind Program Recipients - Wisconsin Department of Justice - Sep 17th, 2024
- MKE County: Crowley Signs Opioid Program Funding - Graham Kilmer - Sep 10th, 2024
- Serenity Inns Opens New Addiction Treatment Center in Milwaukee - Serenity Inns - Aug 14th, 2024
- MKE County: County Nearly Doubles Narcan Vending Machines - Graham Kilmer - Aug 12th, 2024
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