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Maj Kim Patterson
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They are coming to Wichita as well.
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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."“What we're hearing is if people go to purchase [naloxone] over the counter, they're paying anywhere from $40 to $50 for a kit, which makes it very difficult to purchase if you're choosing between gas for the week or Naloxone,” Mayer said.

“It's a tough choice.”

The machines are part of DCCCA’s statewide naloxone access program. The agency also mails naloxone kits and fentanyl test strips to any Kansas resident for free.

Mayer said some of the counties were chosen because they were the biggest utilizers of the naloxone program.

From there, the agency said it would rely on data and its local partners on where the vending machine should be placed outdoors. The locations have yet to be announced, but Mayer said the machines will be outside for 24-hour access.

“We really are trying to focus on areas of high need and where our local partners think it will be most utilized best,” Mayer said.

Funding for the vending machines comes from several different means, including a donation from the Healthy Blue initiative and state and local opioid settlement funds.

A vending machine in Wyandotte County, which has seen a steep increase in overdose deaths since 2018 like several other parts of the state, was recently awarded funding through the state opioid settlement grants.

“This is something that can immediately save a life,” said Pat George, the chair of the board allocating money from the state’s opioid settlement funds.

Discussion for the vending machine has been ongoing with Douglas County’s local government and will be funded with its share of opioid settlement grants, The Lawrence Times reports.

Healthy Blue, an initiative from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Kansas, will fund the rest of the machines through DCCCA and help continue supplying the machines with naloxone.

“With the funding from Healthy Blue, it really was just to determine, are the machines being utilized? Are people receptive to them? Does that help reduce things like stigma? Does it normalize Naloxone usage?” Mayer said. “We're really just waiting to see, kind of, how it's received in Kansas.”

Once the machines are placed, residents can find their locations at dccca.org/naloxone-program."
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