Naloxone Training Video_Injectable Naloxone
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- Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
- This helpful Naloxone Training Video has been developed to demonstrate the most effective way to use: Injectable Naloxone or Naloxone Hydrochloride.
Naloxone Hydrochloride Injection, USP is a sterile, nonpyrogenic solution of naloxone hydrochloride in water for injection. Each milliliter (mL) contains 0.4 mg naloxone hydrochloride and sodium chloride to adjust tonicity in water for injection. May contain hydrochloric acid for pH adjustment; pH 4.0 (3.0 to 6.5).
The single-dose solution contains no bacteriostat, antimicrobial agent or added buffer (except for pH adjustment) and is intended for use only as a single-dose injection. When smaller doses are required, the unused portion should be discarded.
My buddy got the vials and the needle. I had no idea how much to use. Didn't come with instructions. This video was great because its the same little bottle and needle as we picked up. It was informative but not a lot of over explaining. Short and to the point and that's great and important because if someone was overdosed and I had to look it up some of the other videos are so long that a person could die before watching enough video to know how to properly inject them and try to save them. Thank you.
Great demonstration, perfect 5 stars
I know this video is old, but I hope somebody reads these comments still. I've carried these types of injectable naloxones with me for the past few years but never had to use it until tonight. I tried to suck up the liquid into the needle, but for some reason neither bottle would suck up more than a few drops and I don't understand why. I ended up doing CPR until the ambulance came and took over, but the scariest moment of my life was thinking I had a way to save someone and realizing that it wasn't working. Did I do something wrong? These are supposed to be fast and easy to save a life, but it wasn't and I don't know why.
oh gosh that's terrifying. perhaps it must of been a bad syringe. i hope they are doing better
Thanks for posting this. I started carrying Naloxone due to a rash of accidental fentanyl related drug overdoses.
My issue is How to carry the kit on your person. BTW: My kits consist of 2 vials and two syringes in a ziplock bag.
Frederick Calabrese buy a $15 hard case that says nail one kit off of amazon!
Up your butt?
Put the entire kit, with instructions in fairly solid hard case and LABEL it. Check it frequently for damage and expiration date. Once it expires, take it back to the pharmacy and exchange for an up to date one.
maybe just get a nasal spray version. as a rn, I usually don't carry needles around coz I got no sharp box, so it's kinda risky out there
@@jackchan7129 Often all I can get are the intramuscular syringes.
Hi mam! One thing clear me when and why nelaxone inject to the patient, I mean how much time used drugs and the point of nalaxone ????? Please guide me
Great video thank you!
Thank you for this lesson
HI Thanks for the video. so what would be the time gap for next dose pls?
Anju Gupta
2 minutes
Thank you so much Peter.
@@98anju
You have to remember that the naloxone only lasts for 30 minutes or so and the effect of the opioids taken may be much longer. So before giving it to an overdosed person, call 911 or 999, whatever your emergency number is, or ask someone else nearby to do it. The point is that you might have to use both doses to bring them back. The doses are fast acting, short duration drugs. If you don’t have help coming with further treatment, the person will relapse back into the overdose and you will have nothing else to do to help them. The paramedics will have what the patient needs to keep alive until they are at the hospital.
Noloxone kits are given by the Ontario government to any narcotic prescribed patient. I carry mine always, not only for myself but, anyone else who needs it.
I often miss a dose instead of running the risk of overdose. A kit properly used for someone else, is a life saved, with the opportunity for help to get things under proper control. The kits are available from your Ontario pharmacy. If you are a person who doesn’t use opioids but, are frequently around people who do. You can also get a kit to save those you come in contact with. Ask your pharmacist for one and get them to demonstrate the proper procedure for use.
get the information study and get a kit
What do I do if the patient doesn't have a pad over their shoulder?🤨
Hmmm we dont do needles cant be helping junkies
@ Reina Africana
Not everyone who takes opioids is a drug addict. Some, in fact, quite a few are pain patients. Sometimes, when your pain is so bad, you lose track of what is going on. I remember once preparing my medicines for the day. Then without even knowing that I was doing so, I swallowed the entire bottle of pills at once. When I called telehealth and told them, it was embarrassing to give them the names and quantities of what I had accidentally taken. I went to the hospital, where they pumped my stomach and observed m for the day. Since then I separate my drugs according to time and purpose. I t makes it more difficult to carry around, but keeps me safe.
I have had to take medicines for most of my life. The consequences of being a preemie and having health and pain issues. In those days they didn't hand out these kits.
Regardless of the fact that I never take more than prescribed, the nature of many drugs is that you are addicted anyway and have to go down off them slowly.
I have lowered my drug intake by half and am in the slow process of taking a drug holiday from some.
It is always a delicate and difficult process , since there is no such thing as a safe, no side effects drug.
People who don't have to live with them, have no idea what it's like to deal with it every day.
I have gone cold turkey off some pain medication and "climbed the walls for 4 days. No fun.
As far as addicts are concerned, as long as they are alive, they have the chance for a productive life. If they die from an overdose, not only are they lost, so are family and friends, who will always suffer wondering what they did wrong. Most often, the addiction had nothing to do with the ones left to wonder.
That's someone's child...
oh wow, Reina Africana, this is one of the most ignorant comments I've read in a while. I'm curious, though, what the unedited version of this comment was lol
do you HONESTLY feel this way? i mean I truly pity you if so. it's primitive, narrow minded shit such as this that continues to breed hate make it difficult for people to move forward rather than promote harm reduction and awareness. man grow up.
Grow up
@@barbarae-b507 100% agree with you. I’m 20 and have had almost 20 major surgeries in the past few years. I live with a line in my chest of IV nutrition everyday. I don’t have a working GI system so I need needles and such for my meds to give to myself to bypass my GI tract. I’ve had lot of joint surgeries and 7+ on my hips needing new hips but I’m too young for a hip replacement. I have narcolepsy and xyrem which is a form of ghb is the common treatment. People don’t understand who don’t live the life everyday of chronic pain or being so so so ill their whole lives for reasons out of their control. Mines genetic. It’s not worth explaining to some who have so much ignorance to others in life besides to only think of stereotypes.