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Bills Aim To Curb Drug Overdoses In Ohio

A chart showing drug overdose trends released during a press conference featuring Reps. Sprague and Driehaus. (Karen Kasler/Statehouse Bureau)

Two state lawmakers are backing a package of bills that they say will help crack down on drug overdoses, especially involving heroin, which state figures show is responsible for nearly half of all overdose deaths. Statehouse correspondent Karen Kasler reports.

One of the bills is called the Good Samaritan Act, which Rep. Denise Driehaus (D-Cincinnati) said provides immunity from minor drug possession charges for drug users who call for help for another user who may be overdosing.

"It is about not getting in the way of the other person using who is not overdosing doing the right thing," Driehaus said.

But Rep. Robert Sprague (R-Findlay) says the protection doesn't extend forever.

"We will still be able to go after drug dealers if they have more than a gram," Sprague said.

One bill would require insurers to cover pills that are difficult to crush and therefore harder to abuse, and another would set limits on the lengths of prescriptions for painkillers, to ensure they're not being written for a larger supply than is medically necessary.