Sheriff’s Office and Pacific Pride Foundation Provide Naloxone Training to Inmates

Sheriff’s Office and Pacific Pride Foundation Provide Naloxone Training to Inmates title=
Sheriff’s Office and Pacific Pride Foundation Provide Naloxone Training to Inmates
20 Comments
Reads 3598

By the Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Office

Sheriff’s Office staff have partnered with Pacific Pride Foundation (PPF) to provide naloxone training to inmates, beginning with the Northern Branch Jail. On Monday, December 12, 2022, over 90 inmates were trained by PPF on recognizing signs of an overdose as well as how and when to correctly administer naloxone. Sheriff’s Office staff also educated inmates on California's 911 Good Samaritan law. The goal of this training is to increase awareness of the dangers of opioids and opioid overdose, increase lifesaving overdose intervention and decrease overdose deaths, both in our custody facilities as well as in our communities.

Sheriff Brown said, “Overdoses from fentanyl and other opioids kill far too many people in our communities. It is important that everyone knows how to recognize when an overdose has occurred and know how to use naloxone to save a life. We in the Sheriff’s Office are proud to partner with Pacific Pride Foundation to provide this awareness and training to our county jail inmates.”

Naloxone is a potentially lifesaving medication designed to reverse the effects of an opioid overdose. Opioid overdose can be due to many factors including deliberate 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 for which 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 scenarios, 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 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.

The Sheriff’s Office would also like to remind the public that a person 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.

Login to add Comments

20 Comments

Show Comments
spearo Dec 14, 2022 10:36 AM
Sheriff’s Office and Pacific Pride Foundation Provide Naloxone Training to Inmates

How about the sheriffs do a better job keeping street drugs out of the jail in the first place?

This isn't an issue of accidental OD due to "a patient takes an opioid as directed but for which the prescriber miscalculated the opioid dose, when an error was made by the dispensing pharmacist, or when the patient misunderstood the directions for use." Medication in jail is administered through a monitored process. This is just a liability-reduction exercise for the county jail, by shifting responsibility from jail staff to the inmates.

No one accidentally does drugs while in jail. Let them all face the reality of their choices. And sometimes that reality is dying on a concrete floor, be it a side walk or the floor of a jail cell.

sacjon Dec 14, 2022 11:36 AM
Sheriff’s Office and Pacific Pride Foundation Provide Naloxone Training to Inmates

The choice to ingest drugs isn't always (and rarely is) the choice to die. How clean do you think prison drugs are? Not very. It's easy to cut something with fentanyl (or other toxic substances) and the user unknowingly ODs, thinking they're just going to snort a line of coke or smoke a joint. Pretty easy (and disturbing) to just dismiss the lives of others because they made "a choice" that you clearly don't understand or care about. Gross.

OGSB Dec 14, 2022 06:41 PM
Sheriff’s Office and Pacific Pride Foundation Provide Naloxone Training to Inmates

Sac- I agree, sorta. An addict knows the possible consequences though. The difference is they accept it and roll. I do agree that no compassion is GROSS. I have a bigger problem with PP using their money on this. My daughter was harassed recently with her wife for being lesbian and walking.. Why not spend that on awareness or something more related to the LGBTQ+ this? also, do the inmates carry Narcan now or...

sacjon Dec 14, 2022 09:40 PM
Sheriff’s Office and Pacific Pride Foundation Provide Naloxone Training to Inmates

OGSB - sorry to hear about your daughter and her wife, that is awful. I do have to say though, it's not only "addicts" that are at risk. Anyone, whether it's their first time doing drugs or just a casual user, can OD on dirty drugs. Fentanyl has been found in everything from weed to cocaine, not just opiates, and has killed everyone from first timers to seasoned addicts.

Please Login or Register to comment on this.