Saving Lives: Deputies will carry nasal spray to reverse drug OD's
Richard Byrd For Sun Tribune | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 7 years, 4 months AGO
GRANT COUNTY — Naloxone has proven over the years to save lives. The nasal anti-opioid spray has been used by countless law enforcement agencies across the country in reviving victims of opioid overdoses and will soon be in the hands of Grant County Sheriff’s Office deputies in hopes of repeating that nationwide success in Grant County.
Deputies will soon receive training and be issued about 100 single-dose spray dispensers, sold under the brand name Narcan. Naloxone is used to help revive victim of heroin, morphine, fentanyl, codeine, hydrocodone, oxycodone, meperidine and methadone overdoses.
“All of these drugs are linked to addiction, and in many cases, law enforcement officers are the first to arrive at the scene of an opioid overdose,” sheriff’s office spokesman Kyle Foreman stated.
Deputies will be issued kits thanks to a grant from the Washington Department of Social and Health Services and managed by the University of Washington’s Center for Opioid Safety Education, Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute. Foreman said a two-pack of spray kits typically runs about $75.
Additional law enforcement agencies, including the Moses Lake Police Department, Ephrata Police Department, Grand Coulee Police Department, Quincy Police Department, Mattawa Police Department, Royal City Police Department, Soap Lake Police Department and Warden Police Department, will be training officers how to use naloxone.
“Not only can we help the victim of an opioid overdose, we can also help another officer or one of our K-9s which becomes exposed to an opioid,” Sheriff Tom Jones said. “We do see many drug crimes involving opioids, and we have responded to several deaths caused by opioid abuse. We hope to reduce opioid deaths, but we also realize that a lot of work needs to be done to try and keep opioids out of the illegal drug trade. That will require the teamwork of policymakers, law enforcement, public health agencies and citizens.”
ARTICLES BY RICHARD BYRD FOR SUN TRIBUNE
Big turnout for Warden Community Days
WARDEN — Five-year-old Juan Vela Jr. sat on the curb with his head down after the Warden Community Days parade Monday morning. The young boy had arrived at the parade too late and missed out on a lot of free candy. As people were leaving the parade, much to Juan’s surprise, a passerby put a grocery bag full of candy in his lap and simply walked away without saying a word or glancing back to see the boy’s bewildered reaction.
Local man pleads guilty to drunk driving
WARDEN — A Moses Lake man who drank as many as eight beers in the hours before a serious injury collision near Warden in November will be spending three months in jail.
Man arrested in Adams County for Moses Lake car theft
MOSES LAKE — An alleged vehicle thief was arrested in Adams County over the weekend after reportedly stealing a vehicle that was warming up at a residence in Moses Lake.