PO Box 360
Trenton, NJ 08625-0360

For Release:
June 24, 2019

Shereef Elnahal
Commissioner

For Further Information Contact:
Office of Communications
(609) 984-7160

Commissioner Authorizes Paramedics to Carry Buprenorphine

Medication to Ease Withdrawal For Patients Given Naloxone

The State Health Commissioner today authorized paramedics to carry buprenorphine to treat acute withdrawal symptoms after patients have been revived from an opioid overdose with Naloxone, the opioid overdose reversal drug.

Commissioner Elnahal signed an Executive Directive today allowing the medical directors of New Jersey’s 21 Mobile Intensive Care Unit (MICU) programs to authorize paramedics to carry buprenorphine, an oral medication used to mitigate what can be severe symptoms of opioid withdrawal after a Naloxone reversal.

 

The MICU programs can—but are not required to—stock the medication as part of the approved list (formulary) of drugs they can administer.

 

“Buprenorphine is a critical medication that doesn't just bring folks into recovery – it can also dampen the devastating effects of opioid withdrawal,” said Health Commissioner Dr. Shereef Elnahal. “That's why equipping our EMS professionals with this drug is so important."

 

The state’s 1,900 paramedics also are not required to administer the drug, but if they do, patients must first be given Naloxone. Before each administration of buprenorphine, paramedics are required to get authorization from their medical command — a physician in a hospital Emergency Department — who oversees the medical care provided by the MICU.

 

A patient’s insurance will be billed for the administration of buprenorphine as part of the paramedic’s treatment, similar to how patients are billed for care of a diabetic emergency or asthma attack.

 

A majority of the members of the state’s Mobile Intensive Care Unit Advisory Committee, which represents medical directors from each of the state’s MICUs, voted to endorse the proposal.

The order takes effect immediately. The directive notes that there is an ongoing public health crisis due to opioid use disorders. There were more than 3,000 overdose deaths in New Jersey last year.

Last week, the state made 16,000 free Naloxone kits (32,000 doses) available to the public at pharmacies around the state.

To learn more about buprenorphine, please visit: https://www.samhsa.gov/medication-assisted-treatment/treatment/buprenorphine

 

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Last Reviewed: 6/24/2019