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                Oregon will soon require health care facilities to provide opioid overdose medication when releasing some at-risk patients.
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                The initiative comes amid a big jump in the number of teens who’ve died from drug overdoses in the last five years.
 
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                        Patients with a history of opioid use would get increased access to overdose reversal medications under a bill backed by Gov. Tina Kotek and top legislative leaders.
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                        One lawmaker said she’s seeing a “skyrocketing” problem of too many people with substance abuse disorder being unable to access treatment and described her bills as a “stopgap” that she said will save lives.
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                        The HIV Alliance in Eugene puts a lot of time and effort into curbing the chances of people getting HIV infections. The alliance already offers needle…
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                        Naloxone is a drug that quickly reverses an overdose of heroin or other opioid drugs. It’s been used by hospitals and emergency medical workers since the…