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State legislation
Legislators in several U.S. states have pushed changes to state laws regarding naloxone co-prescribing. Many have passed and were signed into law. Examples include:
- California. Signed into law in 2018, the California Naloxone Requirement Bill requires medical prescribers to offer a prescription for naloxone (or equivalent) to certain populations at higher risk of overdosing from opiate drugs.[1]
- Colorado.
- Illinois.
- New Jersey.
- New York.
- South Carolina.
See also
- California Naloxone Requirement Bill
- Illinois Opioids-Covid-19-Naloxone Resolution
- New Jersey Opioid Antidote Prescription Bill
- New York Mandatory Opioid Antagonist Prescription Bill
- South Carolina Opioid Overdose Prevention Bill
References
- ^ "Bill Text - AB-2760 Prescription drugs: prescribers: naloxone hydrochloride and other FDA-approved drugs". leginfo.legislature.ca.gov. Retrieved 2020-07-22.