Baltimore City Health Commissioner Issues Statement Following Maine Governor’s Veto for Naloxone Expansion

Thursday Apr 21st, 2016

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

BALTIMORE, MD (April, 21, 2016) – Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen today issued the following statement in response to Maine Governor Paul LePage’s decision to veto L.D. 1547, a bill that would allow pharmacists to dispense naloxone without a prescription to individuals at risk of experiencing an opioid-related drug overdose:

“Today’s decision from Governor LePage to veto increased access to the opioid overdose antidote naloxone demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of the disease of addiction and perpetuates a tragic cycle of stigma.

Every year, tens of thousands across our country die from a preventable illness. The science is clear: naloxone saves lives. As a physician, I have personally administered naloxone and seen patients who would otherwise die from an opioid overdose be revived within seconds.

By vetoing this Bill, Governor LePage is perpetuating a dangerous myth: that saving someone’s life with naloxone will only foster addiction. This is unscientific, inhumane, and ill-informed. We would never refuse an EpiPen to someone experiencing a peanut allergy for fear that it would encourage them to eat peanut butter. There is no scientific evidence that naloxone will increase drug use; it is safe, effective, and life-saving.

In Baltimore, we believe that naloxone should be part of everyone's medicine cabinet and everyone's first aid kit. Our principle is that if we don’t save live today, there is no chance for a better tomorrow. That is why I issued a standing order— similar to one vetoed in Maine today—that has made this medication available to all 620,000 residents of our city. We do not wait for more of our residents to die while politicians blindly disregard the facts. We make policy decisions based on science, not stigma.

Addiction is a disease. We must treat it with the same urgency, humanity, and compassion as we treat all diseases. We must do all that we can in every city and every state to prevent overdose deaths, treat addiction, and save lives."

Related Stories

Baltimore City Health Department Announces Public Dashboard Tracking Opioid Overdoses

Baltimore, MD— On Monday, the Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD) announced the launch of a public dashboard to track and report data on opioid overdoses in Baltimore City. The dashboard includes data from 1999 through 2020– the last year for which finalized data is available.

Health Commissioner Declares Code Blue Extreme Cold Alert for Baltimore City Friday Evening

BALTIMORE, MD (February 2, 2023)— With frigid air moving into the area, bringing forecasted wind chills down into the single digits, Health Commissioner Letitia Dzirasa today issued a Code Blue Extreme Cold declaration for Baltimore City Friday evening, February 3rd through Saturday morning, February 4th.

Health Commissioner Declares First Code Blue Extreme Cold Alert of the Season

BALTIMORE, MD (December 22, 2022)— Temperatures are predicted to fall rapidly tomorrow mid-morning, accompanied by high winds. With windchills expected to fall below 0˚F through this weekend, Health Commissioner Letitia Dzirasa today issued a Code Blue Extreme Cold declaration for Baltimore City beginning Friday morning, December 23 through Monday morning, December 26.  This is the first Code Blue Extreme Cold Alert for Baltimore City this season.