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Professional Naloxone Training: UK Guidelines and Best Practices

Steve van de Worp
5 mins read
November 14, 2025

Professional Naloxone Training: UK Guidelines and Best Practices

Opioid overdoses kill more than 2,000 people each year in the UK, yet naloxone—a medication that reverses overdose in minutes—remains unfamiliar to many workplaces that could benefit from having it on hand. The gap between naloxone's life-saving potential and its actual availability in non-medical settings represents a missed opportunity for organisations employing staff who might encounter overdose situations.

This guide covers what naloxone does, who needs training, UK legal requirements for workplace programmes, and how to choose training that builds genuine competency rather than just ticking a compliance box.

What Is Naloxone and How It Reverses Opioid Overdose

Naloxone is an opioid antagonist medication that temporarily reverses the life-threatening effects of an opioid overdose. When someone overdoses on opioids like heroin, fentanyl, or prescription painkillers, these drugs bind to opioid receptors in the brain and suppress breathing. Naloxone works by displacing opioids from these receptors and restoring normal respiratory function within 2-5 minutes.

In the UK, you'll find naloxone available under brand names including Nyxoid (nasal spray) and Prenoxad (pre-filled injection). The medication doesn't harm someone who hasn't taken opioids, which makes it safe to administer when you're uncertain whether an overdose involves opioids. However, naloxone only works on opioid overdoses—it won't reverse overdoses from other substances like cocaine, benzodiazepines, or alcohol.

The effects of naloxone typically last 30-90 minutes, which is shorter than many opioids remain active in the body. This means someone can slip back into overdose after naloxone wears off, making emergency services essential even after successful administration.

UK Legal Framework for Naloxone Supply and Training

UK legislation allows naloxone to be supplied and administered without a prescription under specific conditions, making it accessible to workplaces and community organisations. Understanding these legal provisions helps employers implement naloxone programmes confidently while meeting their duty of care obligations.

1. Schedule 19 Exemption Explained

The Human Medicines Regulations 2012 includes a Schedule 19 exemption that permits anyone to administer naloxone in an emergency to save a life, even without medical training. This exemption also allows certain organisations—including drug treatment services, homeless shelters, and prisons—to supply naloxone kits to individuals at risk of witnessing an overdose.

While the exemption provides broad legal protection, organisations typically implement training programmes to verify staff can recognise overdoses and use naloxone devices correctly. The exemption doesn't require formal certification, though documented training demonstrates due diligence if questions about workplace safety procedures arise.

2. Patient Group Direction and Prescription Rules

Healthcare settings often supply naloxone through Patient Group Directions (PGDs), which are written instructions that allow healthcare professionals to supply medicines to groups of patients without individual prescriptions. PGDs require authorisation from a doctor or pharmacist and outline who can supply naloxone, to whom, and under what circumstances.

Outside healthcare settings, organisations can obtain naloxone through partnerships with local drug and alcohol services or by having a healthcare professional write a prescription for workplace emergency kits.

3. Employer Liability and Insurance Considerations

Employers have a legal duty of care to protect staff from reasonably foreseeable risks, which includes providing naloxone training in environments where opioid overdose is a potential hazard. Proper training and documentation create a clear record that your organisation has taken reasonable steps to safeguard employees.

Most employer liability insurance policies cover trained staff administering naloxone in good faith during an emergency, though confirming coverage with your insurer is worthwhile. Maintaining training certificates and attendance records strengthens your position if any liability questions arise, demonstrating that staff acted within their competency and training scope.

Who Needs Naloxone Training in the Workplace

Healthcare facilities, substance misuse services, and mental health settings represent the most obvious environments requiring naloxone training, but the need extends further than many organisations initially recognise. Facilities management teams working in public spaces, housing associations supporting vulnerable tenants, and emergency services all encounter situations where naloxone knowledge could save a life.

A workplace risk assessment provides the clearest picture of whether your organisation would benefit from naloxone training. Consider whether staff might encounter unconscious individuals, work with populations experiencing substance use issues, or operate in areas where drug use occurs.

What Professional Naloxone Training Covers

Professional naloxone training goes beyond simply learning to use a device—it builds comprehensive competency in recognising, responding to, and managing opioid overdose emergencies. Training typically runs between 90 minutes and half a day, depending on whether it includes additional life support skills.

Core Learning Outcomes

Participants learn to identify the signs of opioid overdose, which differ from other medical emergencies and substance-related incidents. The training covers naloxone's mechanism of action, legal responsibilities under UK law, and the critical importance of calling emergency services even after successful naloxone administration.

You'll also learn naloxone's limitations, including why it doesn't work on non-opioid overdoses and how re-sedation can occur as the medication wears off. Courses explain the Good Samaritan principle that protects people who administer naloxone in good faith, even if they're not healthcare professionals.

Hands-On Device Practice

The most valuable component of professional training involves physically handling naloxone devices and practising administration techniques. Intranasal spray devices require assembly before use—a simple process that can feel complicated during a high-stress emergency if you've never practised it.

Similarly, intramuscular injections involve specific techniques for site selection and needle insertion that benefit enormously from hands-on rehearsal. At Kasorb, our trainers—many of whom are paramedics and emergency nurses—bring real naloxone devices to sessions so participants can build muscle memory with the actual equipment they'll use in emergencies.

Scenario-Based Assessments

Realistic overdose scenarios allow participants to apply their knowledge in simulated emergencies that mirror real-world conditions. The scenarios typically involve finding an unresponsive person, assessing their condition, deciding whether naloxone is appropriate, and performing the full response sequence including calling 999.

Instructors observe how participants work through decision points and provide immediate feedback on technique and timing. This assessment approach reveals whether someone can actually perform under pressure, not just recall information on a written test.

Training Formats Compared: On-Site, Blended and Online

Different training formats suit different organisational needs, though not all approaches provide equivalent skill development—particularly for hands-on procedures like naloxone administration.

On-Site Group Sessions

Face-to-face training delivers the most comprehensive learning experience because participants can ask questions specific to their workplace, practise with actual devices, and receive personalised feedback from experienced instructors. Group sessions also create opportunities for team discussion about how naloxone protocols fit into existing emergency procedures.

Kasorb's on-site training uses a flat group rate for up to 12 people, which often proves more cost-effective than sending staff to individual courses.

Virtual Classroom With Practical Add-On

Blended learning combines online theory modules with shorter face-to-face practical sessions, which can work well for organisations with geographically dispersed teams. Participants complete knowledge-based content remotely, then attend a condensed hands-on session focused purely on device practice and scenario training.

This format reduces time away from work while still verifying staff develop practical competency. However, it requires careful coordination to schedule practical sessions and may not build the same depth of understanding as integrated training where theory and practice reinforce each other throughout.

Self-Paced E-Learning Modules

Purely online naloxone courses provide theoretical knowledge about overdose recognition and naloxone's mechanism of action, but they can't replicate the hands-on experience of assembling a nasal spray or performing an injection. While e-learning offers convenience and lower costs, staff completing online-only training may lack confidence when facing an actual emergency.

Step-By-Step Guide to Recognising and Responding to Opioid Overdose

Knowing the correct sequence of actions during an overdose emergency helps you respond effectively when every second counts. This protocol follows UK Resuscitation Council guidelines and applies whether you're using intranasal or intramuscular naloxone.

1. Assess Responsiveness and Breathing

Approach the person and check for consciousness by speaking loudly and gently shaking their shoulders. Look for signs of opioid overdose: very slow or absent breathing, blue or grey lips and fingernails, pinpoint pupils, and inability to wake.

If the person is unresponsive and not breathing normally, you're facing a medical emergency that requires immediate action. Don't waste time trying to determine what substance they've taken—if you suspect opioids might be involved, proceed with naloxone administration.

2. Call 999 and Prepare Naloxone

Calling emergency services is your first priority, even before administering naloxone. Tell the operator you're dealing with a suspected opioid overdose and that you're about to give naloxone—this information helps them dispatch the appropriate response.

While on the phone or immediately after, retrieve your naloxone kit and check the expiry date. Though expired naloxone is better than no naloxone, using in-date medication verifies maximum effectiveness.

3. Administer Intranasal Spray

For Nyxoid nasal spray, remove the device from its packaging and hold it with your thumb on the plunger and two fingers on the nozzle. Tilt the person's head back slightly, insert the nozzle into one nostril, and press the plunger firmly to release the spray.

The entire 1.8mg dose releases in a single spray. If the person doesn't respond within 2-3 minutes, give a second dose in the other nostril if available.

4. Administer Intramuscular Injection

If using Prenoxad pre-filled injection, remove the cap and inject into the outer thigh muscle, even through clothing if necessary. Hold the syringe like a dart and insert the needle at a 90-degree angle, then press the plunger steadily to deliver the full dose.

The thigh provides the safest injection site for non-medical responders because it's a large muscle with minimal risk of hitting nerves or blood vessels.

5. Monitor and Provide Basic Life Support

After giving naloxone, place the person in the recovery position if they're breathing but unconscious. If they're not breathing, begin CPR with chest compressions and rescue breaths if you're trained to do so.

Naloxone typically works within 2-5 minutes, but the person may remain drowsy or confused even after breathing restarts. Stay with them until paramedics arrive, and be prepared to give additional naloxone doses if they stop breathing again—some opioids last longer than naloxone's effects.

Certification, CPD Hours and Compliance Documentation

Professional naloxone training typically provides a certificate valid for one to three years, depending on the training provider and your organisation's policies. Many courses offer CPD (Continuing Professional Development) points, which matter particularly for healthcare professionals and social care workers who maintain professional registration.

Certificates include the participant's name, training date, course content summary, and instructor credentials. Keep copies of all training certificates and attendance records as part of your organisation's compliance documentation—the records demonstrate due diligence if health and safety inspectors or insurance assessors review your emergency response procedures.

Annual refresher training helps maintain competency and updates staff on any changes to protocols or available naloxone products.

Costs, Group Sizes and Booking Options

Naloxone training costs vary widely depending on format, group size, and whether the training includes additional first aid content. Online courses typically cost £20-40 per person, while face-to-face training ranges from £50-150 per person for individual bookings.

Group bookings offer significantly better value, with many providers offering flat rates for teams of 8-12 people. Book your team's naloxone training today and verify your staff have the skills and confidence to respond effectively during opioid emergencies.

Storing, Maintaining and Replacing Naloxone Kits

Proper storage and maintenance verify your naloxone kits remain effective when you need them. Unlike some emergency medications, naloxone is relatively stable and straightforward to store, though a few key practices protect your investment and guarantee reliability.

Recommended Storage Conditions

Store naloxone kits at room temperature between 15-25°C, away from direct sunlight and moisture. Most workplaces keep kits alongside first aid supplies in clearly marked, easily accessible locations—you want people to find naloxone quickly during an emergency without having to search through cupboards or locked cabinets.

Balance accessibility with security by placing kits in areas that staff can reach immediately but that aren't vulnerable to theft or tampering.

Expiry Checks and Stock Rotation

Naloxone typically has a shelf life of 18-36 months from manufacture. Assign someone to check expiry dates quarterly and order replacements at least three months before kits expire—this buffer prevents gaps in coverage if supply delays occur.

Create a simple log sheet attached to or near your naloxone storage location where staff record each inspection date and the kit's expiry date.

Post-Use Reporting and Restock

After administering naloxone, replace the kit immediately—even if you only used one dose from a multi-dose kit. Many local drug and alcohol services provide free replacement naloxone to organisations that have used their supplies during genuine emergencies, though you'll need to complete an incident report form.

Document every naloxone administration with basic details: date, time, location, outcome, and whether emergency services attended.

Further Resources and Support Links

Several UK organisations provide additional naloxone resources, clinical guidance, and support for workplace programmes:

  • Release offers legal advice and harm reduction resources at www.release.org.uk
  • SMMGP (Substance Misuse Management in General Practice) provides clinical guidelines at www.smmgp.org.uk
  • Public Health England publishes naloxone commissioning guidance and local service directories

Local drug and alcohol services often provide free naloxone kits, training, and ongoing support to community organisations—contact your local authority's public health team to identify commissioned services in your area.

Empower Your Team to Save Lives With Kasorb Training

Naloxone training equips your staff with life-saving skills that extend far beyond workplace boundaries—people who learn to recognise and respond to opioid overdoses carry that knowledge into their communities, potentially saving lives in any setting. At Kasorb, our instructors bring genuine emergency experience to every session, sharing practical insights that only come from actually managing overdose situations in the field.

We deliver training at your workplace with all necessary equipment, making it straightforward for your entire team to gain critical skills together. Book your naloxone training session today and give your staff the knowledge and confidence to respond effectively when it matters most.

FAQs About Naloxone Training In The UK

Can volunteers carry naloxone without formal healthcare roles?

Yes, UK legislation allows trained volunteers to carry and administer naloxone under the Schedule 19 exemption. Proper training and organisational protocols are essential for legal protection, though the law doesn't require formal healthcare qualifications to use naloxone during emergencies.

How often does naloxone training need refreshing?

Most organisations recommend annual refresher training to maintain competency and update knowledge. Some high-risk environments may require more frequent updates, particularly if staff turnover is high or if new naloxone products become available.

Does naloxone cause side effects that staff monitor?

Naloxone can trigger withdrawal symptoms in opioid-dependent individuals, including agitation, nausea, rapid heart rate, and sweating. The effects are temporary and far less dangerous than continued overdose—the person may be uncomfortable but they're breathing, which is the primary goal.

Can naloxone kits be stored in vehicles or outdoor sites?

Naloxone works best when stored between 15-25°C and protected from extreme temperatures. Vehicle storage requires temperature monitoring, especially during summer months when car interiors can exceed 40°C—consider insulated storage containers or rotating kits between vehicles and climate-controlled locations seasonally.

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