Opioid overdose is a growing public health emergency in the United States. The antidote naloxone must be administered rapidly after opioid overdose to prevent death. Bystander or “take-home” naloxone programs distribute naloxone to opioid users and other community members to increase naloxone availability at the time of overdose. However, data describing the natural history of take-home naloxone in the hands of at-risk individuals is lacking. To understand patterns of naloxone uptake in at-risk users, we developed a smart naloxone kit that uses low-energy Bluetooth (BLE) to unobtrusively detect the transit of naloxone through a hospital campus. In this paper, we describe development of the smart naloxone kit and results from the first 10 participants in our pilot study.
CITATION STYLE
Lai, J. T., Chapman, B. P., Boyle, K. L., Boyer, E. W., & Chai, P. R. (2018). Low-energy Bluetooth for detecting real-world penetrance of bystander naloxone kits: A pilot study. In Proceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (Vol. 2018-January, pp. 3253–3258). IEEE Computer Society. https://doi.org/10.24251/hicss.2018.411
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