Dare School Board approves new Naloxone policy

Move will allow school employees to administer overdose rescue drug

In a unanimous vote at its May 8 meeting, the Dare County Board of Education passed a new policy allowing school personnel to administer Naloxone. The so-called rescue drug that can reverse the effects of an opioid overdose, Naloxone has become an important tool in the battle against the opioid epidemic.

Dare County School Board Member Matt Brauer asked if school nurses and school resource officers should be the primary administrator of Naloxone.

School personnel are not required to train to use Naloxone, but the policy establishes guidelines for the storage, procurement, administration and other details related to Naloxone on campus. Students and parents or guardians will be notified annually of the policy.

According to the draft policy text in the meeting agenda packet, Naloxone will be stored in the school nurseโ€™s office or another location designated by the school nurse or superintendent, and it โ€œshall be made available to those trained to administer it in the event of a suspected drug-related overdose.โ€

The school nurse will ensure that all trained staff are aware of the Naloxoneโ€™s storage location and will periodically check the expiration date, notifying administration prior to its expiration, according to the policy.

Lists of school district employees who have completed Naloxone administration training will be maintained in the school districtโ€™s administrative office and in the head nurse supervisorโ€™s office. Anyone who administers Naloxone โ€œin accordance with North Carolina law is immune from any civil or criminal liability,โ€ the policy notes.

โ€œThe Dare County Board of Education makes no representation regarding the availability of Naloxone in the school system at any given time,โ€ the policy states.

The policy also says law enforcement will be notified of the possession or use of illegal substances and that students using illegal substances will be disciplined in accordance with board policies.

Other district policies that were revised or added at the May 8 meeting were done so at the recommendation of the North Carolina School Boards Association, according to Dare County Board of Education Attorney Rachel Hitch.

โ€œBut this is one [policy] that came up in conjunction with your local health department,โ€ Hitch said, adding that Assistant Superintendent Steve Blackstock worked on the draft policy in conjunction with school nurses before it was brought to the board for adoption.

During a roughly 10-minute discussion on the topic, School Board Member Matt Brauer asked several questions, including whether the policy came from a standing order from the state. The standing order since August 2017, signed by the North Carolina State Health Director, allows anyone at risk of experiencing an overdose, anyone who may be able to assist someone experiencing an overdose, or anyone who requests naloxone, to receive the medication.

โ€œThe standing order from the state removes hurdles for you to have the medicine in the school system if you need itโ€ฆso that you may [have this policy],โ€ Hitch responded.

โ€œWhy wouldnโ€™t we justโ€ฆlay it off on the school nurse, who is a healthcare provider, or even the school resource officer, whoโ€™s a first responder? Shouldnโ€™t they be the primary person to administerโ€ Naloxone? Brauer asked.

Dare County Schools Superintendent Steve Basnight responded that the goal is to make Naloxone available where itโ€™s needed, in accessible locations. Blackstock agreed, adding that many activities take place in school buildings after school hours when the school nurse is not onsite.

The Dare County Department of Health and Human Services distributes Naloxone at no cost to community members, so Hitch noted that teachers and students may already have the medication on hand.

โ€œWe figured if itโ€™s in your schools, then we need to make sure that weโ€™re telling people how it needs to be handled,โ€ Hitch said.

In response to Brauerโ€™s question about potential civil litigation, she said that sheโ€™d learned from a Dare County Health Department presentation that if someone were not overdosing and received Naloxone, โ€œthere are no implications,โ€ meaning they wouldnโ€™t suffer harm.

โ€œThe idea was: The administration is easy, the risk is very minimalโ€ฆand the possibility that the issue finds its way to your schools is unfortunately very high; so that was the thinking behind the policy,โ€ Hitch said.

Board Member Mary Ellon Ballance said that some teachers and substitutes are also trained first responders or volunteer first responders who may have used Naloxone in that role to treat overdoses. โ€œI know that Hatteras has several that are also members of the rescue squad and work at the rescue squad in the summer, so they would have access [to Naloxone].โ€

Board Member David Twiddy asked about what might happen if a student experienced an overdose while on an activity bus away from campus and no one there had the medication.

Basnight said that the policy doesnโ€™t require Naloxone to be available in โ€œevery aspect of school life. What weโ€™re saying is, if itโ€™s going to be in the building, hereโ€™s where we want it.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s similar to the AEDs [Automated external defibrillators], Hitch added. โ€œWe donโ€™t have them everywhere, but we know that if we have them somewhere, that we have a chance of helping a kid.โ€

This article original ran on May 10, 2023. Read the original article on the Island Free Press website.

Heavenly journey: Message in a bottle floats on to France in tribute of woman who died from Fentanyl

Patricia Drewes decided to write the message. She wrote Heaven’s story in a letter, wrapped it in a photo of her and sealed it in a bottle. It was found in France.

When Patricia Drewes dropped a message in a bottle off the Carolina coast, she didnโ€™t expect it to be found halfway around the world – but she hoped it would.

“I wanted anyone who found that bottle to know the story of this beautiful girl who had such a beautiful life and a beautiful heart,” Drewes said.

Her daughter, Heaven Leigh Nelson, died of a Fentanyl poisoning in 2019. She was 24.

“These kids are getting illicit synthetic Fentanyl and they don’t have any clue that’s what they’re getting,” Drewes said. “”(Her) life was stolen from her, from myself, from her family, from her friends by a poisoning.”

Since then, Drewes has been raising awareness about the dangers of the illicit drug while caring for her grandson.

โ€œI am the founder of Forgotten Victims of North Carolina. We have eight chapters across the state,” Drewes said. “We reach out to these families, we support these families and our motto is ‘No one stands alone’. That’s the one thing I remember is being alone and thinking I was the only person in the world that this has happened to. We offer support to these families and we become friends and then we become family.”

Every year, Drewes and her grandson take a beach trip on Jan. 28 – Heaven’s death date.

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โ€˜North Carolina has a problemโ€™: Task force discusses rise in child fentanyl deaths

RALEIGH, N.C. (WNCN) โ€“ More children in North Carolina are dying from fentanyl in recent years. The North Carolina Child Fatality Task Force took a closer look at those deaths and what could be done to prevent them during its meeting Thursday.

The N.C. Office of the Chief Medical Examiner Chief Toxicologist Sandra C. Bishop-Freeman shared the harrowing data with the task force.

โ€œIt has become clear that fentanyl is the first and foremost opioid that is currently causing illicit deaths in the pediatric population,โ€ said Bishop-Freeman.

Bishop-Freeman said 108 North Carolina children died from fentanyl in the past decade, most of them are teenagers or are babies and toddlers.

โ€œWe have older individuals that are using the drug recreationally, either knowingly or unknowingly, and toddlers and infants that are finding the drug through exploration,โ€ Bishop-Freeman said.

She said thereโ€™s been a huge increase in the past few years, with 35 fentanyl deaths in 2022 for teenagers and children below 5.

Marty McCaffrey sits on the state committee that reviews child deaths.

โ€œItโ€™s always been the worst meeting and the most horrific meeting I go to every month, but over the last couple of years I will say, if itโ€™s possible, itโ€™s gotten even more horrible,โ€ McCaffrey said.

McCaffrey and others in the meeting said when it comes to solutions, safe storage is critical.

He suggests giving mothers who have known substance abuse issues secure boxes. He also suggests that after a mother gives birth hospitals should send her home with Narcan if doctors know the children in that home may be at risk for coming in contact with drugs.

โ€œI mean, weโ€™re going to have to accept, and really change our culture, about how we deal with some of these moms, all of these moms, with substance use, and recognize thereโ€™s good harm reduction strategies we have to start employing,โ€ McCaffrey said.

Read the article and watch the video on the CBS17 website.

Teen’s death linked to fentanyl, Franklin Co. Sheriff says

18-year-old Jacob Cope died on Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024. According to a Facebook post from Franklin County Sheriff Kevin White, Cope died from accidentally ingesting “the tiniest amount of fentanyl

According to a Facebook post from Franklin County Sheriff Kevin White, Cope died from accidentally ingesting “the tiniest amount of fentanyl.”

โ€œHis family is scarred forever,โ€ White said.

Copeโ€™s friend, 2023 Heritage High School graduate Wilson Moore, was also found dead that morning.

White said he keeps Copeโ€™s photo in his office to remind him why he wanted to become Franklin County Sheriff.

โ€œIt hits close to home for me,โ€ he said. โ€œIt will serve as a constant reminder of the passion I have to end the rapid decline that is eroding our neighborhoods, our state and our country.โ€

It is unclear if fentanyl ingestion is the cause of Mooreโ€™s death, but Mooreโ€™s mother suspects it is drug-related.

Read the article and watch the video clip on the WRAL News website.

As opioid overdoses rise in NC, Wake schools looking to stock naloxone in all schools

The Wake school system hasn’t had any reported overdoses, but other school systems have.

Wake County school officials plan to recommend naloxone โ€” the overdose reversal medication โ€” in every school and a policy for staff on training and using it.

Superintendent Robert Taylor told the school boardโ€™s safety and security committee Tuesday that officials will come to the committee in April with a proposed policy and a timeline for getting naloxone in every school, early learning center and administrative office.

Naloxone is a prescription medication that reverses opioid overdoses. It targets opioid receptors in the body and blocks the effects of opioid drugs, restoring breathing in a person who has overdosed. It must be administered soon after an overdose has begun and only lasts a short time. It can be administered in several ways but is commonly administered as a nasal spray.

The Wake school system hasnโ€™t had any reported overdoses, but other school systems have.

Last year, naloxone was administered 21 times for a suspected overdose at a North Carolina school, usually by a school resource officer.

The district wants to have naloxone in part because of rising opioid overdoses among 10- to 19-year-olds, said Kelly Creech, district senior director of health and crisis prevention services.

Across the state, school resource officers, not school employees, carry naloxone.

Any upcoming policy proposal would reflect training requirements for employees who want to be able to administer it.

On Tuesday, school board members asked questions about who would have the ability to administer naloxone.

Under state law, school systems must have permission from the state health director to allow non-medical employees to administer naloxone.

Most school systems donโ€™t have a policy in place for school employees to administer naloxone. Of the 86 counties that responded to the state survey, 83 reported school resource officers carrying naloxone.

The school system wants two doses in about 200 schools, early learning centers and central services offices. The average dose lasts between two and three years.

Read the full article on the WRAL TV5 News website.

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Senate Lawmakers Issue โ€˜Urgent Request’ to President Biden to Close De Minimis โ€˜Loophole’

Two U.S. senators penned an “urgent request” to President Joe Biden this weekend, pushing for the use of executive authority to end the de minimis trade “loophole.”

Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Oh.) and Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fl.) on Saturday sent an open letter to the president asking him to end duty-free treatment for e-commerce shipments worth under $800-an exemption created by Section 321 of the Tariff Act.

According to the lawmakers, the rule is being exploited to facilitate “the import of illegal products, goods produced with forced labor, and other contraband to the detriment of U.S. manufacturers, workers and communities.” De minimis doesn’t just provide foreign shippers with financial benefits, they argued-it also allows bad actors to circumvent customs enforcement, as individual packages of lower value often enter the country “with minimal to zero inspections.”

The legislators said that Chinese goods made with forced labor “appear to be the heaviest users of de minimis, undermining enforcement of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA).” About 3 million parcels enter the country each day using the de minimis rule, and they pose an “elevated risk” of being made withย forced labor, containing counterfeit products or contributing to the fentanyl crisis, as drugs have been smuggled in small, low-value shipments.

Continue reading “Senate Lawmakers Issue โ€˜Urgent Request’ to President Biden to Close De Minimis โ€˜Loophole’”

eBay and the Department of Justice settle over pill press sales

On January 31, 2024, eBay and the U.S. Department of Justice announced a settlement: In return for not prosecuting eBay for alleged violations of the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) related to the sale of pill presses and encapsulating machines since 2015, eBay will pay $59 million and strengthen compliance programs around the sale of these machines on their platforms.

In a statement, eBay reiterated that the company โ€œexpressly denies the DOJโ€™s allegations and the settlement does not include any admission of wrongdoing.โ€

The Partnership for Safe Medicines has monitored the online pill press market for years, which means we have witnessed eBayโ€™s efforts to successfully suppress the sale of these products on its platform. In light of this settlement, it is likely that other platforms that could be used to sell pill presses and encapsulating machines may ban these sales rather than undertake the burden of compliance. In the future, pill press sales will likely be confined to overseas platforms that are more difficult for U.S. regulators to reach.

This appears to be the first time that the U.S. Department of Justice has applied the โ€œbrokerโ€ role in this statute to an online marketplace for pill press or encapsulating machine transactions. This follows the Biden administrationโ€™sย novel use of Treasury sanctions against Chinese pill press manufacturers in 2023.

Read the full analysis and the settlement document on the Partnership for Safe Medicines website.

Senators urge Biden to end duty-free treatment for packages valued at less than $800

WASHINGTON (AP) โ€” Two U.S. senators looking to crack down on the number of packages from China that enter the country duty-free are calling on President Joe Biden to take executive action, saying U.S. manufacturers canโ€™t compete with low-cost competitors they say rely on forced labor and state subsidies in key sectors.

U.S. trade law allows packages bound for American consumers and valued below a certain threshold to enter tariff-free. That threshold, under a category known as โ€œde minimis,โ€ stands at $800 per person, per day. The majority of the imports are retail products purchased online.

Alarmed by the large increase in such shipments from China, lawmakers in both chambers have filed legislation to alter how the U.S. treats imports valued at less than $800. Now, Sens. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Rick Scott, R-Fla., have sent a letter to Biden calling on him toย end the duty-free treatmentย altogether for those products.

โ€œThe situation has reached a tipping point where vast sections of American manufacturing and retail are at stake if de minimis is not immediately addressed,โ€ the senators wrote.

Brown and Scott singled out Temu, Shein and AliExpress in their letter as companies that โ€œunfairlyโ€ benefit from the duty-free treatment of their goods. The surge in shipments, they said, hurts big box stores and other retailers in the U.S.

โ€œThis out-of-control problem impacts the safety and livelihoods of Americans, outsourcing not only our manufacturing, but also our retail sectors to China, which โ€” as you know โ€” systematically utilizes slave labor among other unconscionable practices to undermine our economy,โ€ the senators said.

The White House referred questions to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the letter provided to The Associated Press.

Continue reading “Senators urge Biden to end duty-free treatment for packages valued at less than $800”

Families, teams hurting from suspected drug-related deaths of 2023 Heritage, Bunn grads

A pair of recent Triangle-area high school graduates who were friends linked through their love of baseball died over the weekend.

Two young men who were friends and shared a love of baseball died over the weekend, devastating families and teammates.

Wilson Moore, a 2023 graduate of Heritage High, and Jacob Cope, who graduated from Bunn High in 2023, both passed away on Saturday.

Both Moore and Cope played on a travel baseball team and their respective high school teams before graduating. The two met through work and developed a friendship. The sudden nature of their deaths shocked and saddened friends and family in recent days.

Moore’s GoFundMe said the family suspects Moore died from “accidental substance poisoning.” Cope, 18, also has a GoFundMe to support his family.

Rolesville police are investigating. A toxicology report has not been finalized.

Continue reading “Families, teams hurting from suspected drug-related deaths of 2023 Heritage, Bunn grads”
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