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Mecklenburg County ABC stores now carry kits with lifesaving drug

Mecklenburg County ABC stores now carry kits with lifesaving drug

Yahoo23-04-2025

Mecklenburg County ABC stores now carry a new product – the lifesaving overdose reversal drug naloxone.
Channel 9's Eli Brand learned the goal for Mecklenburg County is to be a model for other counties, so they can follow the same blueprint.
Brand went to the ABC Spirits on North Graham Street, which is one of 31 locations in Mecklenburg County with a naloxone kit inside the store. The kit includes a dose of naloxone and instructions on how to use it.
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Naloxone, better known by the name brand Narcan, reverses opioid overdoses.
'They're not breathing well. Their pupils are dilated, maybe their lips and fingernails are turning blue,' said Scott Minderlein, a senior officer with the Mecklenburg County ABC Board.
Minderlein is also an instructor with ABC University, a class that teaches useful skills like how to administer naloxone.
Minderlein told Channel 9 he's personally had to administer the medication.
He said the board's main concern is saving people who accidentally touch something potent like fentanyl.
'Maybe someone is using this drug and it gets on their hands and they wind up touching the doorknob, or maybe they end up touching one of the bottles, and the clerk rings it up and wipes their nose,' Minderlein said. 'Now they have inhaled or ingested the drug, so to speak.'
Harry Parker works across the street from an ABC Spirits. He told Channel 9 he's apprehensive about the program and whether it's safe to have non-medical staff administer the medication.
'Let the police handle the situation,' Parker said. 'I mean you're not a medical physician what are you going to do?'
Minderlein said the first call from employees will be to 911 to get medical officials on the move.
He also said ABC law enforcement have the kits on them and know how to use them.
The in-store dosages are there so employees can start the lifesaving process.
ABC University also teaches other useful skills outside of how to use naloxone, including things like how to identify someone in danger of overdosing.
The Mecklenburg County ABC Board said they want to help other counties get naloxone in their stores.
They also want to get naloxone into nightclubs and bars across the county.
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McKee signs four pairs of bills into law
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McKee signs four pairs of bills into law

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Trump's First Surgeon General: RFK Jr. Purging the CDC Advisory Committee Will Put Lives at Risk
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Unlike other countries with centralized systems for identifying at-risk individuals, the U.S. expects patients—many of whom lack easy access to healthcare—to navigate eligibility alone. Risk assessment should also consider individual circumstances beyond underlying health conditions. A 58-year-old bus driver or healthcare worker faces significantly greater exposure than someone working remotely. By limiting vaccines to specific groups based solely on preexisting health status, the policy overlooks these critical contextual differences. Secretary Kennedy's team argues that there is insufficient evidence to support updated COVID-19 vaccines for healthy Americans under 65, but this claim is flatly unfounded. Years of real-world data demonstrate that vaccines save lives and reduce hospitalizations across all age groups. During the 2023 to 2024 fall and winter season, 95% of those hospitalized for COVID had not received an updated vaccine. 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Vaccination during pregnancy is crucial—not just for maternal health but also for protecting infants under six months, who cannot be vaccinated and rely on maternal antibodies for protection. Decades of research confirm that vaccines, including COVID vaccines, safely transfer antibodies to newborns, lowering their risk of severe illness. The dismissal of ACIP's members amplifies these concerns. ACIP has been a trusted, science-driven body that ensures vaccines are safe and effective, saving countless lives through its transparent recommendations. Its members, rigorously vetted for expertise and conflicts of interest, provide independent guidance critical to public health. Removing them without clear evidence of misconduct risks replacing qualified scientists with less experienced voices. This move fuels vaccine hesitancy and skepticism about public health decisions, particularly when paired with the bypassing of ACIP's review process for the new COVID vaccine policies. These changes create uncertainty about who can access vaccines. Without clear CDC recommendations, insurance companies may impose their own coverage criteria, potentially increasing costs for a vaccine that was previously free for most Americans. Healthcare providers, lacking federal guidance and ACIP's expertise, may struggle to advise patients, leading to a confusing and inequitable system that limits choice—hardly the 'medical freedom' Secretary Kennedy claims to champion. Ultimately, these actions threaten to erode trust in public health. FDA officials argue the new framework enhances transparency, yet bypassing ACIP's review and dismissing its members undermines that aim. Extensive data demonstrate that updated vaccines lower hospitalization and death rates, yet this evidence was sidelined. Such actions breed skepticism, making it harder to unite Americans around shared health goals. The stakes are high, but a better path is possible. 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We must seize this opportunity to unite around science and ensure a healthier, safer, and prosperous future for all Americans.

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