CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 11, 2024, OR THEREAFTER
BY
THOMAS D. ELIAS
“IS THIS NEWSOM’S BEST MOVE AS GOVERNOR?”
For sure, Gov. Gavin Newsom believes his
2020 stay-home order at the start of the coronavirus pandemic saved thousands
of lives.
Many other states soon followed with
similar orders, although some never ordered much significant change in normal
behavior.
There is some evidence that Newsom’s
order saved lives, a statistical fact disputed in Florida and other states
governed by conservative Republicans.
But there will be no doubt about the
lives saved by Newsom’s latest medical move: He’s ordered CalRx, the Medi-Cal
prescription program, to buy thousands of doses of generic Naloxone, the main
reliable fentanyl antidote, and have them distributed by police, fire
departments, hospitals, colleges, high schools and other qualifying
organizations to people believed to be at risk of dying from fentanyl
poisoning, even if they don’t think they ever took the drug.
For plenty of people consume fentanyl
without suspecting it.
A stunning figure from the federal Drug
Enforcement Administration shows that six of every 10 counterfeit pills sold in
this country now contain a potentially lethal dose of fentanyl, a 50 percent
increase since 2021, when four of 10 fake pills contained the drug.
To be poisoned, you don’t need to visit
Tijuana or other parts of Mexico where many drugs that require prescriptions
are faked and can be easily bought. Thousands of persons have died in
California from taking fentanyl without knowing it, via smuggled -in pills and
those actually made in American labs.
Signs of a fentanyl overdose are not
very different from symptoms of other opioid drug overdoses: Small, constricted “pinpoint” pupils;
falling asleep or losing consciousness; slow, weak, or failed breathing;
choking or making gurgling gasps; a limp body, cold and/or clammy skin, plus
discolored skin, often in lips or nails.
Just two milligrams can cause overdose or death. But
fentanyl can neither be smelled nor tasted, making it nearly impossible to tell
without special test strips if pills contain or have been laced with the
opioid. That makes it essential in this era to buy pills only from reputable,
proven sources.
Most of the 5,942 persons who died of
fentanyl poisoning in California between September 2021 and the same month in
2022, the last full year for which figures are available, had no idea they were ingesting
fentanyl when they took it.
Enter Naloxone. As early as 2018, a
California law known as AB 2760 required prescribers to offer patients
knowingly taking fentanyl a companion scrip for that opioid-reversing agent if
they are taking more than 90 milligrams of fentanyl or a morphine equivalent
daily.
But Naloxone was expensive when
then-Gov. Jerry Brown signed AB 2760. No longer. From now on it will be free
when administered on an emergency basis. Even in this year of an unusually
tight state budget, Newsom found money to pay for enough to stock all relevant
agencies.
CalRx will buy 3.2 million twin packs of
a new over-the-counter version of the antidote for $24 per pack, about half the
market price, from a New Jersey pharmaceutical firm which only weeks ago saw
its product approved by the FDA. Again, the new packs will be free to all who
need them.
This will be part of a previously
announced program seeing CalRx buy generic and biosimilar drugs from makers of
inexpensive insulin and other medications. The original goal was to move
generic drug makers toward lowering prices not just for the state but for
ordinary consumers.
Generic pharma companies are sometimes
reluctant to drop prices, but the mass buying power of the state’s Medi-Cal
program was enough to move one Naloxone maker this time. Some opposition to
lowering prices stems from big-name pharmaceutical makes like Bayer paying
smaller generic firms not to make some drugs, thus forcing consumers to
continue buying expensive name brands even after patents have expired.
The trick now will be for friends and
companions of unknowing fentanyl users to recognize symptoms and call for help
quickly, much the same way as strokes have long been handled. Only time will
tell if this works, but Newsom at least has moved as quickly as possible to try
saving fentanyl victims. In this area, that’s all anyone can ask of a governor
and more than most have bothered to do.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book,
"The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the
Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover
fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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