Will County Reports Progress in Opioid Fight, Highlights New FDA Labeling Rules
Article Summary:
Will County is seeing a reduction in opioid overdose deaths and is expanding access to the reversal drug Narcan, health officials reported. The department also drew attention to new FDA rules that will require opioid pain medication labels to include clearer warnings about addiction, overdose, and safe usage.
Will County Public Health & Safety Committee Key Points:
-  
Opioid overdose deaths in Will County are decreasing, and the county has recently deployed 10 new “red boxes” to broaden community access to Narcan.
 -  
The FDA is mandating updated labeling for opioid painkillers to better inform patients about risks, provide dosing warnings, and include information on the overdose-reversal drug naloxone (Narcan).
 
JOLIET, IL – Will County continues to make headway in its battle against the opioid epidemic, with overdose deaths trending downward and new federal regulations aimed at improving patient safety, officials told a county committee Thursday.
During a report to the Public Health & Safety Committee, Denise Bergen of the Will County Health Department said that while the county is now monitoring all drug-related deaths to watch for emerging trends, the numbers for opioid overdoses are declining. The county also recently rolled out 10 more “red boxes,” which provide public access to the life-saving overdose reversal drug Narcan, to further combat the crisis.
Bergen, presenting the substance use initiatives report, also highlighted a significant change from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regarding how opioid pain medications are labeled.
“They’re going to make the information clearer so that someone can easily understand what’s happening,” Bergen said.
The new FDA requirements will mandate that labels warn consumers about the dangers of long-term opioid use, provide clear dosing warnings to prevent accidental overdoses, and remove language that could be misinterpreted as supporting indefinite use. The labels will also include information about safely discontinuing the medication, the risks of drug interactions, and the availability of naloxone, the generic name for Narcan.
The report also sparked a brief discussion about other substances, with committee member Mica Freeman (D-Plainfield) asking about Kratom and other psychoactive products sold in vape shops. Bergen confirmed these plant-based substances are often unregulated and legal, allowing smoke shops to “take full advantage.”
Latest News Stories
 ICE agents shoot armed woman in suburban Chicago during attack
 Pritzker: Trump to federalize Illinois National Guard
 Trump says U.S. in ‘armed conflict’ with drug cartels in Caribbean
 Policy experts unimpressed with SBA’s ‘record’ capital delivered to small businesses
 City taxpayer burden swells, as Chicago pension debt rises
 Poll: Voters like candidates supporting war on Alzheimer’s
 U.S. LNG exports at new record in September on strong Louisiana shipments
 Conservatives push Union Pacific–Norfolk Southern merger
 Hamas agrees to release hostages; demands further negotiations
 Report: Bipartisan support for K-12 open enrollment policy
 WATCH: U.S. military strikes another suspected drug boat, killing four
 ‘End the political idiocy’: Republicans lambast Dems for tanking funding bill again