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1 | | AN ACT concerning public aid.
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2 | | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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3 | | represented in the General Assembly:
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4 | | Section 5. The Early Mental Health and Addictions |
5 | | Treatment Act is amended by adding Section 15 as follows: |
6 | | (305 ILCS 65/15 new) |
7 | | Sec. 15. Pilot program for 8-milligram naloxone nasal |
8 | | spray kits. |
9 | | (a) Findings. The General Assembly finds the following: |
10 | | (1) In its May 2022 Statewide Semiannual Opioid |
11 | | Report, the Department of Public Health reported that |
12 | | 3,013 fatalities occurred in 2021 due to opioid overdoses. |
13 | | (2) These 3,013 opioid overdose deaths in Illinois |
14 | | represent a 2.3% increase from 2020 and a 35.8% spike from |
15 | | 2019. |
16 | | (3) In 2021, toxicology testing found that 2,672 or |
17 | | 89% of the opioid fatalities involved a synthetic opioid |
18 | | such as fentanyl. |
19 | | (4) A 4-milligram naloxone nasal spray has been the |
20 | | principal tool for bystanders and emergency medical |
21 | | service providers to revive an individual from an overdose |
22 | | episode. |
23 | | (5) A study published in the Harm Reduction Journal in |
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1 | | May 2022 surveyed 125 adult residents of the United States |
2 | | who were administered a 4-milligram naloxone nasal spray |
3 | | during an opioid overdose. The study found that 78% of the |
4 | | adults surveyed reported using at least 2 or more doses of |
5 | | the 4-milligram naloxone nasal spray. While 30% of the |
6 | | adults surveyed reported using at least 3 or more doses of |
7 | | the 4-milligram naloxone nasal spray. |
8 | | (6) A 2021 article published in the Harm Reduction |
9 | | Journal reported on a study conducted by the Johns Hopkins |
10 | | Bloomberg School of Public Health which surveyed 171 |
11 | | people living in suburban Maryland who use opioids. |
12 | | Sixty-one or 35.7% of the persons surveyed reported having |
13 | | received take-home naloxone during the 6-month period |
14 | | immediately prior to the start of the study. 57% of those |
15 | | persons reported using it to reverse an overdose. Out of |
16 | | that group of persons who had an overdose reversal, 79% |
17 | | reported needing at least 2 or more doses of the take-home |
18 | | naloxone. |
19 | | (7) The National Library of Medicine recently |
20 | | published a study that analyzed emergency medical services |
21 | | (EMS) data collected and stored in the National Emergency |
22 | | Medical Services Information System database. The study |
23 | | examined data collected from over 10,000 EMS agencies |
24 | | across 47 states concerning 946,000 EMS calls that |
25 | | involved the administration of naloxone. The study found |
26 | | that naloxone multi-dosing by emergency medical service |
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1 | | providers increased 54% over 5 years, from 18.4% to 28.4% |
2 | | in 2020. |
3 | | (8) On April 30, 2021, the U.S. Food and Drug |
4 | | Administration approved a higher 8-milligram dose naloxone |
5 | | nasal spray product to treat opioid overdose. |
6 | | (9) Thirty-three states have Naloxone Standing Orders |
7 | | that authorize eligible entities to have open access to |
8 | | the 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray. Those states are: |
9 | | Ohio, Kentucky, Iowa, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New |
10 | | Jersey, Virginia, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Colorado, |
11 | | Alaska, New Hampshire, Illinois, Arizona, Kansas, |
12 | | California, Texas, Georgia, South Carolina, North |
13 | | Carolina, West Virginia, Michigan, Connecticut, Oklahoma, |
14 | | Minnesota, Maine, Louisiana, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon, |
15 | | Nebraska, and Vermont. |
16 | | (10) Thirteen state government agencies have purchased |
17 | | the 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray: Alabama, Alaska, |
18 | | Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, New Hampshire, |
19 | | Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and West |
20 | | Virginia. |
21 | | (11) In November 2021, the U.S. Department of Veterans |
22 | | Affairs added the 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray to the |
23 | | VA National Formulary. |
24 | | (12) 70% of Americans with private health insurance |
25 | | can access the 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray. |
26 | | (13) 90% of Americans with Medicaid, including |
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1 | | Medicaid recipients residing in Illinois, can access the |
2 | | 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray. |
3 | | (14) The current cost of the 4-milligram naloxone |
4 | | nasal spray is $5.93 per milligram. In contrast, the |
5 | | 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray costs 36.7% less at $3.75 |
6 | | per milligram. |
7 | | (b) The Department of Human Services shall implement a |
8 | | 2-year pilot program to provide FDA-approved 8-milligram |
9 | | naloxone nasal spray kits to licensed community substance use |
10 | | providers and public health departments in Cook County, DuPage |
11 | | County, Winnebago County, Sangamon County, and St. Clair |
12 | | County. |
13 | | The Department of Human Services shall implement a data |
14 | | collection program to determine the number of 8-milligram |
15 | | naloxone nasal spray kits administered by emergency medical |
16 | | service providers and bystanders per overdose incident during |
17 | | the 2-year term of the pilot program. The data collected must |
18 | | also include the number of individuals who survived as a |
19 | | result of the 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray intervention |
20 | | and those who became deceased. The data collected must also |
21 | | include the number of opioid overdose reversals attributed to |
22 | | the administration of the 8-milligram naloxone nasal spray |
23 | | intervention, by county. |
24 | | The Department of Human Services shall prepare a report on |
25 | | the results of the 2-year pilot program and submit the report |
26 | | to the General Assembly by July 1, 2026.
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