Patrol Deputy Successfully Resuscitates Overdose Patient

By the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office

A deputy on proactive patrol in Goleta successfully resuscitated a man he found overdosing. On Monday, November 28, 2022, at approximately 11:49 pm, a deputy on proactive patrol noticed an adult male lying on his back on the sidewalk near the 5900-block of Hollister Avenue. The deputy stopped to checked on the subject and found him unresponsive. The deputy recognized the signs of an apparent overdose and requested an emergency medical response. While medics were enroute, the deputy administered a single dose of naloxone to the patient who regained consciousness before being transported by ambulance to an area hospital. The patient is expected to survive.

The Sheriff’s Office would like to highlight this incident as an example of the danger of fentanyl use, the importance of carrying naloxone, and recognizing the signs of overdose which may include:

  • Difficult to wake up
  • Slowed Breathing
  • Confusion
  • Blue or pale lips and fingernails
     

If you notice these signs, call 911 immediately and give naloxone. An individual who is experiencing an opioid overdose needs immediate medical attention. An essential first step is to get help from someone with medical expertise as quickly as possible. Therefore, members of the public are encouraged to call 911 when they suspect an overdose is occurring. California’s 911 Good Samaritan law, AB 472, provides limited protection from arrest, charge and prosecution for people who seek emergency medical assistance at the scene of a suspected drug overdose.

Naloxone is a potentially lifesaving medication designed to help reverse the effects of an opioid overdose in minutes. Opioid overdose can be due to many factors including deliberately misuses of a prescription, illicit opioid use (such as heroin), or use of an opioid contaminated with other even more potent opioids (such as fentanyl). Overdose can also occur when a patient takes an opioid as directed but the prescriber miscalculated the opioid dose, when an error was made by the dispensing pharmacist, or when the patient misunderstood the directions for use. In each of these, it is vital to recognize and be prepared for a possible life-threatening opioid overdose emergency. The Sheriff’s Office would like to remind the public that our community partners at Pacific Pride Foundation (PPF) offer FREE naloxone at their syringe exchange program and at their Santa Barbara and Santa Maria offices. Please visit PPF’s website- PacificPrideFoundation.org for more information about Naloxone distribution and overdose prevention.

sbsheriff

Written by sbsheriff

Press releases written by the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office

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3 Comments

  1. Free narcan, free syringes? What, no alcohol swabs? Giving the “junkies” a clean syringe so they don’t acquire or pass on an infection before they overdose and die. Why not just set up shop and sell “junkies” pharmaceutical narcotics that can be injected with their clean syringes. And some people still wonder why we can’t eliminate our drug problem:)

    • DOULIE – Providing clean and safe drugs won’t help the drug problem so much, but it could help the death problem. Street drugs are unreliable, dirty and sometimes spiked intentionally. We’re never going to win the “war” on drugs, so we might as well try to reduce the casualties, right? Maybe legalizing hard drugs (like we do with Adderall, alcohol, oxycontin, etc) will reduce the number of OD deaths.
      During Prohibition, people were going blind from moonshine. How many people are going blind from Jack Daniels or IPAs now? I’m being a little facetious, but maybe you are on to something with the whole clean drugs idea!

  2. SBZZ – I believe this person will return to their dealer, tell them about the “great high” he received from his last “buy” and ask for more of the same. This “junkie” will likely boast about this close encounter to his friends. I doubt he will concern himself with a “second life” as he’s here to tell us he didn’t die while living his first life. Anything can happen, but, unfortunately I believe the odds are against this person changing. There’s a reason they are called “junkies.”

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