This is different from over-the-counter drugs, which people can buy just by walking into any store that sells them, or by ordering them from an online retailer. Direct medical oversight is not required for most of these purchases.
Experts say a nonprescription, over-the-counter version of naloxone would create an opportunity to put the medication in less traditional settings, like gas stations and vending machines.
But wherever it’s sold, advocates say the price needs to be right in order for an over-the-counter version to have any effect.
The manufacturers of Narcan have not yet revealed the possible list price of an over-the-counter nasal spray.
A 2019 study found that the out-of-pocket costs for naloxone sold at Philadelphia pharmacies ranged from $119 to $150 per dose.
Even for people who have health insurance that may cover a naloxone purchase, Lowenstein said there could still be issues if the medication comes with a steep price.
“People who have high co-pays, which is the case for many commercial plans, that’s a big barrier to getting it in this manner as well,” she said.
There are programs that distribute free naloxone. Medicaid, which provides insurance to people with low incomes, covers the complete cost of a naloxone purchase.
Philadelphia pharmacies dispensed 21,716 naloxone medications to Pennsylvania Medicaid enrollees in 2020, according to city data.
The benefits outweigh any risks, experts say
Addiction medicine specialist Shoshana Aronowitz said the greatest benefit of naloxone is its ability to save someone’s life, and that far outweighs any risks or concerns of someone using the medication inappropriately.
For someone who has taken opioids, but is not suffering an overdose, naloxone could force them into sudden withdrawal. If given to someone who doesn’t have opioids in their system, it has no effect – harmful or otherwise, according to the National Institute of Drug Abuse.
Aronowitz is a senior fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics at the University of Pennsylvania.
“I think maybe what we can educate people more about is how to actually recognize a true overdose versus someone who’s nodded out or is just very sleepy,” she said.