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Find Naloxone

Naloxone is life-saving medication that can reverse an opioid overdose.  

  • If you are an individual who wants naloxone for yourself or a loved one, please contact one of our Project Hope partners.
  • If you want to become a distributor of naloxone or you need a refill of your naloxone order, please email ProjectHope@alaska.gov.

Health Warnings to Alaskans

Talk to your loved ones about the dangers of fentanyl and other opioids and share these warnings:

Watch May 5 Webinar:

Reducing Opioid Misuse and Managing Pain Safely

On May, 5, 2022, DHSS hosted a public webinar via Zoom to help inform Alaskans about safe drug disposal and storage, non-opioid pain alternatives, and overdose prevention.

Reducing Opioid Misuse and Managing Pain Safely

Watch April 14 Webinar:

Overdose is Closer than you think

On April 14, 2022, DHSS hosted a public webinar via Zoom on the dangers of fentanyl and how to prevent opioid overdoses, including a demonstration on how to use fentanyl test strips to test for fentanyl in drugs and how to administer naloxone, a medication that can reverse a drug overdose.

PDFOverdose is Closer Than You Think


Opioid epidemic in Alaska

The opioid crisis affects everyone in the state in some way. Its victims are of all ages, races and walks of life. The causes are complex and everyone must work together toward a solution.

Snapshot of Alaska

  • The highest number of opioid-related deaths identified in one year was 108 in 2017 (preliminary data); of which, 100 (93%) were due to overdose.
  • During 2010–2017, with 623 identified opioid overdose deaths, the opioid overdose death rate increased 77% (from 7.7 per 100,000 persons in 2010 to 13.6 in 2017).
  • Synthetic opioids, excluding methadone, caused 37 deaths –37% of all 2017 opioid overdose deaths, with fentanyl contributing to 76% (28 of 37) of those deaths.
  • From 2012–2017, the rate of out-of-hospital naloxone administrations by Emergency Medical Service (EMS) personnel more than doubled, from 8.0 to 17.7 administrations per 1,000 EMS calls in 2012 and 2017, respectively.
  • The rates of opioid-related inpatient hospitalizations were 28.5 per 100,000 persons in 2016 and 26.0 per 100,000 persons in 2017, with total inpatient hospitalization charges exceeding $23 million.

Progress is being made

  • Despite the escalating rate of opioid overdose deaths and high hospitalization rates, there are several encouraging findings:
  • Preliminary data suggest a 36 percent reduction in the number of people who passed from opioid-related overdose deaths, from 100 people in 2017 to 64 people in 2018.
  • The rate of Medicare Part D patients who received opioid prescriptions has decreased annually since 2015, suggesting more judicious prescribing in Alaska.
  • Naloxone use is increasing; this is likely due in part to the increased statewide availability of this life-saving overdose reversal medication.

Learn more about the State of Alaska's focus areas for the response in the Statewide Opioid Action Plan.