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Effectiveness of bystander naloxone administration and overdose education programs: a meta-analysis

212

Citations

23

References

2015

Year

TLDR

The review aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of bystander naloxone administration and overdose education programs by synthesizing quantitative evidence from the literature. The authors performed a meta‑analysis of eligible studies, calculating odds ratios for overdose recoveries and standardized mean differences for training test scores. Pooled results showed that bystander naloxone administration markedly increased recovery odds (OR ≈ 8.6) and that overdose education significantly improved participants’ knowledge (SMD ≈ 1.35).

Abstract

The objective of this review was to assess the effectiveness of bystander naloxone administration and overdose education programs by synthesizing quantitative results reported in the research literature. Studies meeting predefined criteria were identified and reviewed, and their results were synthesized through meta-analysis. Odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated for overdose recoveries for individuals who received naloxone dispensed by non-medical community members, and the standardized mean difference was calculated for test scores of non-medical volunteers who received training in overdose management versus the scores of untrained volunteers. Pooled data from four studies showed that naloxone administration by bystanders was associated with a significantly increased odds of recovery compared with no naloxone administration (OR = 8.58, 95% CI = 3.90 to 13.25). Data from five studies of overdose education indicated that average scores were significantly higher for trained participants than untrained participants for tests on naloxone administration, overdose recognition, and overdose response (standardized mean difference = 1.35, 95% CI = 0.92 to 1.77). Empirical evidence in the research literature suggests that bystander naloxone administration and overdose education programs are associated with increased odds of recovery and with improved knowledge of overdose recognition and management in non-clinical settings.

References

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