Author | Study Title | Year | Study Methodology | Region |
---|---|---|---|---|
Barbour et al. [40] | Emergency physician resistance to a take-home naloxone program led by community harm reductionists | 2018 | Cohort study | California, Irvine, US |
Beletsky et al. [32] | Physicians’ Knowledge of and Willingness to Prescribe Naloxone to Reverse Accidental Opiate Overdose: Challenges and Opportunities | 2007 | Cross-sectional survey | United States |
Carpenter et al. [36] | Factors Associated with How Often Community Pharmacists Offer and Dispense Naloxone | 2018 | Cross-sectional survey | North Carolina, US |
Davis et al. [43] | Legal Changes to Increase Access to Naloxone for Opioid Overdose Reversal in the United States | 2015 | Review article | United States |
Drainoni et al. [46] | Why is it so hard to implement change? A qualitative examination of barriers and facilitators to distribution of naloxone for overdose prevention in a safety net environment | 2016 | Qualitative study | Boston, US |
Gaston et al. [60] | Can we prevent drug related deaths by training opioid users to recognise and manage overdoses? | 2009 | Cohort study | Birmingham and London, England |
Hammett et al. [38] | Pharmacies as providers of expanded health services for people who inject drugs: A review of laws, policies, and barriers in six countries | 2014 | Qualitative study | U.S., Russia, Vietnam, China, Canada and Mexico |
Khatiwoda et al. [64] | Facilitators and Barriers to Naloxone Kit Use Among Opioid-Dependent Patients Seeking Treatment at Medication Assisted Therapy Clinics in North Carolina | 2016 | Cross-sectional survey | North Carolina, US |
Pricolo et al. [41] | Naloxone Rescheduling in Australia: Processes, Implementation and Challenges with Supply of Naloxone as a “pharmacist Only” over-the-Counter Medicine | 2018 | Review article | Australia |
Sondhi et al. [42] | Stakeholder perceptions and operational barriers in the training and distribution of take-home naloxone within prisons in England | 2016 | Qualitative study | England |
Tobin et al. [30] | Attitudes of emergency medical service providers toward naloxone distribution programs | 2005 | Cross-sectional survey | Baltimore, US |
Tobin et al. [65] | Awareness and Access to Naloxone Necessary but Not Sufficient: Examining Gaps in the Naloxone Cascade | 2018 | Cross-sectional survey | Baltimore, US |
Winograd et al. [31] | Medical providers' knowledge and concerns about opioid overdose education and take-home naloxone rescue kits within Veterans Affairs health care medical treatment settings | 2017 | Cross-sectional survey | United States |