# “It’s a last straw situation”; Overdose response and preferences for seeking support from emergency services during overdose in rural Ohio

**Authors:** David C. Colston, Vivian F. Go, Clare Barrington, Adams L. Sibley, Hannah M. Piscalko, Laura Limarzi-Klyn, William C. Miller, Joseph Gregory Rosen, Joseph Gregory Rosen, Joseph Gregory Rosen

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0338689 · 2026-01-16

## TL;DR

This study explores how people in rural Ohio respond to drug overdoses and why they may avoid calling emergency services due to fear of stigma or arrest.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific factors influencing overdose response and offers actionable recommendations to improve emergency support in rural opioid-affected areas.

## Key findings

- Most participants avoided calling first responders during overdoses due to fear of stigma, arrest, or hospitalization.
- Participants who did call for help reported mixed outcomes, including saved lives and negative interactions with law enforcement.
- Increasing awareness of Good Samaritan Laws and reducing stigma could improve emergency response and prevent overdose deaths.

## Abstract

We assessed how people who use drugs in rural Ohio communities affected by the opioid epidemic respond to overdose, their preferences for seeking support from first responders, and factors contributing to their willingness or hesitancy to call 9-1-1 during an overdose.

Semi-structured interviews were conducted in select rural Ohio counties from 2021–2022 as part of the Ohio Opioid Project, one of eight sites in the Rural Opioid Initiative focused on overdose in the rural United States. Forty-four interviews with people who use drugs were coded using thematic analysis.

Most participants had suffered an overdose (23/43) or witnessed (33/43) an overdose. Most participants preferred not to seek first responder support during an overdose if the victim was able to be revived. As a result, first responder support was not sought in most overdoses experienced or witnessed by participants. When first responders were called, outcomes varied: some participants felt the overdose victim’s lives were saved, others felt stigmatized by first responders, and one was arrested by law enforcement at the scene. Among participants who preferred not to seek support from first responders, fear of arrest, hospitalization, and stigmatization were the main reasons.

This study details intervenable factors that could prevent overdoses from escalating to fatalities in rural Ohio, including: increasing awareness and knowledge for Good Samaritan Laws to encourage calls to 9-1-1 during overdose, ensuring unlawful arrests are not made at the scene of an overdose, and de-stigmatizing substance use among first responders and health care professionals. Findings may not be generalizable to the entire United States, but may have applicability in other rural, Appalachian areas.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** arrest (MESH:D006323), fatalities (MESH:C565541), Opioid (MESH:D009293), Overdose (MESH:D062787)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12810844/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12810844