EMS Naloxone Administration to Youth
EMS clinicians are often the first healthcare providers to respond to an opioid overdose or poisoning event, and evidence-based guidelines for EMS naloxone administration were developed in 2019 to support this intervention. Gaw’s team investigated the frequency and demographics of pediatric administration of naloxone.
They analyzed data from the National Emergency Medical Services Information System on EMS activations for administration of at least one dose of naloxone during 2022 to those aged 0-17. There were 6215 EMS pediatric administrations of naloxone that year, and in the vast majority of cases (82%), the patient had not received a naloxone injection prior to EMS’s arrival.
Most patients (79%) were aged 13-17 years, but 10% were in the 6-12 age group. The remaining patients included 6% infants younger than 1 year and 4% aged 6-12 years. Just over half were for males (55%), and most were dispatched to a home or residential setting (61%). One in five incidents (22%) occurred at a non-healthcare business, 9% on a street or highway, and the rest at a healthcare facility or another location.
Most of the incidents occurred in urban areas (86%), followed by rural (7%), suburban (6%), and wilderness (1.4%). More occurred in the US South (42%) than in the West (29%), Midwest (22%), or Northeast (7.5%).
A key takeaway of those demographic findings is that ingestions and accidental poisonings with opioids can occur in children of any age, Nichols said. “Every single home that has any opioids in the home should absolutely have naloxone immediately available as well,” he said. “Every single person who is prescribed opioids should also have naloxone available and accessible and to be sure that the naloxone is not expired or otherwise tampered with and update that every few years.” He noted that Narcan expiration was recently extended from 3 years to 4 years by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
“I always advise that people who have opioid medications keep them stored safely and securely,” Nichols said. “However, I also acknowledge that even perfect systems fail and that people make mistakes and may accidentally leave medication out, within reach, or otherwise unsecured. If that happens, and someone were to intentionally or unintentionally get into that medication and potentially overdose as a result, we want to have that reversal medication immediately available to reverse the overdose.”
In nearly all cases (91%), EMS provided advanced life support, with only 7.5% patients receiving basic life support and 1.5% receiving specialty critical care. Just under a third (29%) of the dispatch calls were for “overdose/poisoning/ingestion.” Other dispatch calls included “unconscious/fainting/near-fainting” (21%) or “cardiac arrest/death” (17%), but the frequency of each dispatch label varied by age groups.
For example, 38% of calls for infants were for cardiac arrest, compared with 15% of calls for older teens and 18% of calls for 6-12 year olds. An overdose/poisoning dispatch was meanwhile more common for teens (32%) than for infants (13%), younger children (23%), and older children/tweens (18%). Other dispatch complaints included “sick person/person down/unknown problem” (12%) and “breathing problem” (5%).
A possible reason for these variations is that “an overdose might be mistaken for another medical emergency, or vice versa, because opioid poisonings can be challenging to recognize, especially in young children and in the pediatric population,” Gaw said. “Both the public and emergency responders should maintain a high level of suspicion” of possible overdose for children with the signs or symptoms of it, such as low breathing, unresponsiveness, or small pupils.
In most cases (87%), the patient was not in cardiac arrest, though the patient had entered cardiac arrest before EMS’s arrival in 11.5% of cases. Two thirds of cases only involved one dose of naloxone, while the other 33% involved two doses.
Ryan Marino, MD, an addiction medicine specialist and an associate professor of emergency medicine at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio, who was not involved in the study, took note of the high proportion of cases in which two doses were administered.
“While there is, in my professional opinion, almost no downside to giving naloxone in situations like this, and everybody should have it available and know how to use it, I would caution people on the risk of anchor bias, especially when more than two doses of naloxone are given, since we know that one should be an effective amount for any known opioid overdose,” Marino said. Anchoring bias refers to the tendency for individuals to rely more heavily on the first piece of information they receive about a topic or situation.
“For first responders and healthcare professionals, the importance of additional resuscitation measures like oxygenation and ventilation are just as crucial,” Marino said. “People should not be discouraged if someone doesn’t immediately respond to naloxone as overdose physiology can cause mental status to stay impaired for other reasons beyond direct drug effect, such as hypercarbia, but continue to seek and/or provide additional emergency care in these situations.”
Patients improved after one dose in just over half the cases (54%), and their conditions were unchanged in 46% of cases. There were only 11 cases in which the patient’s condition worsened after a naloxone dose (0.2%). Most of the cases (88%) were transported by EMS, and there were 13 total deaths at the scene (0.2%).
Nichols found the low incidence of worsening clinical status particularly striking. “This is further evidence of a critically important point — naloxone is purely an opioid antagonist, and only binds to opioid receptors, such that if a person has not overdosed on opioids or does not otherwise have opioids in their system, naloxone will not have a significant effect and will not cause them harm,” Nichols said.
“The most common causes of harm are due to rapid reversal of overdose and the potential risks involved in the rapid reversal of opioid effects and potentially precipitating withdrawal, and as this paper demonstrates, these are exceedingly rare,” he said. “Given that, we should have an incredibly low barrier to administer naloxone appropriately.”
The study was limited by inability to know how many true pediatric opioid poisonings are managed by EMS, so future research could look at linking EMS and emergency room hospital databases.