Full Text of SR0028 103rd General Assembly
SR0028 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
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| 1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
| 2 | | WHEREAS, The Illinois Department of Public Health's May | 3 | | 2022 report recorded 3,013 fatalities that occurred in 2021 | 4 | | due to opioid overdoses; and
| 5 | | WHEREAS, The 3,013 Illinois opioid overdose deaths | 6 | | represent a 2.3% increase from 2020 and a 35.8% spike from | 7 | | 2019; and
| 8 | | WHEREAS, In 2021, toxicology testing found that 2,672 | 9 | | (89%) of the opioid fatalities involved a synthetic opioid, | 10 | | such as fentanyl; and
| 11 | | WHEREAS, A 4 milligram naloxone hydrochloride nasal spray | 12 | | has been the principal tool used by bystanders and emergency | 13 | | medical services (EMS) to revive an individual from an | 14 | | overdose episode; and | 15 | | WHEREAS, A study, published in the Harm Reduction Journal | 16 | | in May 2022, surveyed 125 adult U.S. residents who had been | 17 | | administered a 4 milligram naloxone nasal spray during an | 18 | | opioid overdose and found that 78% used 2 or more doses and 30% | 19 | | used 3 or more doses of naloxone; and | 20 | | WHEREAS, A 2021 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public |
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| 1 | | Health study published in the Harm Reduction Journal reported | 2 | | on a survey of 171 people who use opioids in suburban Maryland; | 3 | | sixty-one (35.7%) of these people who use opioids had received | 4 | | take-home naloxone over a six month period; 57% of naloxone | 5 | | recipients used it to reverse an overdose; 79% of overdose | 6 | | reversals reported needing more than 2 doses; and | 7 | | WHEREAS, Published by the National Library of Medicine, a | 8 | | study of the National Emergency Medical Services Information | 9 | | System Database of more than 10,000 EMS agencies across 47 | 10 | | states with 946,000 calls giving naloxone shows that use of | 11 | | naloxone multi-dosing by EMS increased 54% over five-years, | 12 | | from 18.4% to 28.4% in 2020; and | 13 | | WHEREAS, On April 30, 2021, the U.S. Food and Drug | 14 | | Administration approved a higher 8 milligram dose of naloxone | 15 | | hydrochloride nasal spray product to treat opioid overdose; | 16 | | and | 17 | | WHEREAS, On October 19, 2021, the U.S. Food and Drug | 18 | | Administration also approved a single-dose, pre-filled syringe | 19 | | that delivers 5 milligrams of naloxone hydrochloride solution | 20 | | through intramuscular (in the muscle) or subcutaneous (under | 21 | | the skin) injection; and | 22 | | WHEREAS, Thirty-four U.S. states have open access to the 8 |
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| 1 | | milligram naloxone nasal spray on their Naloxone Standing | 2 | | Orders, including Ohio, Kentucky, Iowa, Pennsylvania, | 3 | | Massachusetts, New Jersey, Virginia, Alabama, Florida, | 4 | | Tennessee, Colorado, Alaska, New Hampshire, Illinois, Arizona, | 5 | | Kansas, California, Texas, Georgia, South Carolina, North | 6 | | Carolina, West Virginia, Michigan, Connecticut, Oklahoma, | 7 | | Minnesota, Maine, Louisiana, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, Nebraska, | 8 | | and Vermont; and | 9 | | WHEREAS, Thirteen state government agencies have purchased | 10 | | the 8 milligram naloxone nasal spray, including Alabama, | 11 | | Alaska, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, New | 12 | | Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and West | 13 | | Virginia; and | 14 | | WHEREAS, The U.S. Veterans Administration added the 8 | 15 | | milligram naloxone nasal spray to the National Formulary in | 16 | | November 2021; and | 17 | | WHEREAS, Seventy percent of the number of lives covered by | 18 | | commercial insurance in the U.S. can access the 8 milligram | 19 | | naloxone nasal spray; and | 20 | | WHEREAS, Ninety percent of the number of lives covered by | 21 | | Medicaid insurance in the U.S. (40 states) can access the 8 | 22 | | milligram naloxone nasal spray, including Illinois; and
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| 1 | | WHEREAS, The current cost of the 4 milligram naloxone | 2 | | nasal spray is $5.93 per milligram and the 8 milligram version | 3 | | is $3.75 per milligram, or 36.7 percent less; and
| 4 | | WHEREAS, Being good stewards of taxpayer money is a | 5 | | priority for the Illinois General Assembly; therefore, be it
| 6 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL | 7 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we strongly urge the | 8 | | Illinois Department of Human Services to review the value of | 9 | | expanding its naloxone tool kit to include all U.S. Food and | 10 | | Drug Administration-approved versions of naloxone or other | 11 | | FDA-approved products to fight the Illinois opioid epidemic; | 12 | | and be it further
| 13 | | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | 14 | | delivered to the Governor of Illinois, the Governor's Chief | 15 | | Behavioral Health Officer, the Secretary of the Department of | 16 | | Human Services, and the Director of the Division of Substance | 17 | | Use, Prevention and Recovery.
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