For Oregon delivery
The individual request path is for packages mailed to Oregon addresses. Rural access is a priority, but Oregon residents are not screened out by county or ZIP code.
Oregon mail delivery
Oregon residents can request one or two boxes of nasal naloxone for themselves, a friend, family member, household, or community safety. No insurance, prescription, ID, or required training is needed to make a request.
The individual request path is for packages mailed to Oregon addresses. Rural access is a priority, but Oregon residents are not screened out by county or ZIP code.
The form asks for the information needed to mail the package. It does not ask for insurance, proof of need, demographic details, or a training quiz.
Shipping information is kept for fulfillment. Optional survey responses are stored separately, and requests that need review can be flagged without making people create accounts.
Naloxone is an overdose reversal medication. The FDA has approved over-the-counter naloxone nasal spray, and public-health agencies describe wider naloxone access as an important overdose prevention strategy.
Like an AED in a public space, naloxone is most useful when it is already close by. During an opioid overdose, minutes matter; having naloxone in more homes, workplaces, outreach settings, and community spaces gives a bystander something they can do while emergency help is on the way.
After you submit a request, the mailing address is checked for Oregon delivery and the order goes to the fulfillment team. Most requests should not need a phone call, email exchange, or any other extra step before shipping.
Packages are mailed in plain outer packaging with naloxone and simple information about how to use it. Training resources are available, but watching a video or completing a quiz is not required before naloxone is mailed.
If you are ordering for an agency, nonprofit, school, workplace, outreach program, mutual-aid group, or event, use the bulk-ordering path instead of the individual form.
See the references page for public sources behind the service approach.