Abstract

ABSTRACT Background: Maryland expanded its “Statewide Naloxone Standing Order” (NSO) in 2017 to eliminate training and prescription requirements for obtaining naloxone, improve naloxone access, help reverse opioid overdose, and reduce overdose fatality rates. Objectives: To assess the change in the trends of fatal opioid overdose rates following the expansion of the Naloxone Standing Order (eNSO) and its association with the social determinants of health (SDoH). Methods: Data on overdose deaths and SDoH from 2015–2019 was collected and analyzed using interrupted time series and multivariate Poisson regression models to study the change in trends and the associations. Results: There was a significant decrease in the rate of fatal overdoses after the intervention: prescription opioid estimate number of deaths declined by .25 per 100,000 (p = .02), heroin estimate number of deaths declined by 1.83 per 100,000 (p < .001), fentanyl estimate number of deaths declined by 2.54 per 100,000 (p < .001). After controlling for eNOS implementation in Maryland, state-level estimates with high proportions of female residents and those with bachelor’s degree or higher were associated with reduction in overdose, while state-level estimates with high proportions of African Americans and higher employment rates were associated with an increase in overdose. Conclusions: Our analysis shows that the expanded naloxone standing order is associated with reducing opioid-related overdose death rates. Even though we observed a significant reduction in overdose death rate in fentanyl-related deaths, the rate of deaths post-eNSO was still increasing, suggesting the need for additional measures to impact the rates of fentanyl.

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