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Seminar to explain how to combat opioid epidemic with community paramedicine

EMS providers make home visits within one week of overdoses, provide assistance to addicts and their families and try to link them to services

University of Cincinnati

CINCINNATI — The University of Cincinnati Fire Science program will host a public seminar on how to help combat the opioid epidemic through the use of community paramedicine.

From 9 a.m. to noon on March 16 at the Colerain Township Administration Office, major players in Ohio policy, police, fire and emergency services will convene to discuss this burgeoning technique of combating opioid addiction, how it is already being used and how to spread this model across Hamilton County, the state, the region and beyond.

In 2015, Colerain Township took the community paramedicine model and applied it to the heroin and opioid overdose epidemic, sending a team of police officers, firefighter-EMTs and addiction service professionals to the homes of overdose survivors. Called a Quick Response Team, these trios identify addicts in the community who have recently been revived by naloxone after overdosing. The QRT makes home visits within one week of overdoses, provides assistance to addicts and their families and tries to link them to services.

Between the program’s start in July 2015 and September 2016, more than 250 follow-ups were made to overdose patients with 79 percent of these patients in recovery, and there has been an overall drop in overdoses. Colerain’s QRT has inspired similar efforts in the Cincinnati-area neighborhoods of Norwood, Green Township and as well as elsewhere in Ohio.

Colerain Public Safety Director Daniel Meloy and Colerain Assistant Fire Chief/UC Fire Science adjunct professor Will Mueller will host a seminar Thursday on how the community paramedicine model can be applied successfully to narcotic overdose patients. There will be presentations by state and local officials and key individuals in the fields of fire, emergency medical services and criminal justice from across Ohio. This portion of the event will run 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.

Following those presentations, from 11 a.m. to noon, UC Fire Science and Emergency Management program chair Lawrence Bennett will host a panel discussion on the topic, focusing on how Hamilton County could implement a citywide QRT. The panel will include Hamilton County Sheriff Jim Neil, Cincinnati Fire Chief Richard Braun, a community outreach specialist for the Ohio Attorney General, representatives from area treatment services and even recovering addicts. Find the full lineup of speakers and presenters here.

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