Colorado Code § 17-26-140

Continuity of care for persons released from jail - definition
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(1) If a
person is treated for a substance use disorder at any time during the person's incarceration, the
county jail shall, at a minimum, conduct the following before releasing the person from the
county jail's custody:
(a) Provide post-release resources developed pursuant to section 17-1-103 (1)(r) to the
person;
(b) Provide a list of available substance use providers, to the extent the behavioral health
administration in the department of human services has such a list available;
(c) If the person received or has been assessed to receive medication-assisted treatment
while in jail, has a history of substance use in the community or while in jail, or requests opioid
antagonists upon release, provide the person, upon release from the jail, at least eight milligrams
of an opioid antagonist via inhalation or its equivalent and provide education to the person about
the appropriate use of the medication;
(d) If the person received medication-assisted treatment while in jail, has a history of
substance use, or requests opiate use-disorder medication, prescribe to the person, upon release
from the jail, medication for an opiate use disorder and provide education to the person about the
appropriate use of the medication; and
(e) Coordinate continued care for the person, including scheduling an appointment for
the person with a substance use provider with the ability to continue the person's treatment,
provide the person with detailed information about the scheduled appointment, provide the
person with a prescription for the medication that the person was taking while in custody at the
facility in an amount that is at least sufficient to sustain the person until the scheduled
appointment, and provide the person with a referral to the care coordination infrastructure
described in section 27-60-204.
(2) A county jail shall provide medicaid enrollment or reenrollment paperwork to a
person who is incarcerated in the jail and is eligible for medicaid benefits when the person enters
the county jail. The county jail must file the medicaid paperwork with the county department of
human or social services upon releasing the person from the county jail's custody.
(3) As used in this section, "opioid antagonist" means naloxone hydrochloride or any
similarly acting drug that is not a controlled substance and that is approved by the federal food
and drug administration for the treatment of a drug overdose.
(4) Notwithstanding any requirement of this section, a county jail shall not delay a
person's release from the county jail because the jail cannot timely comply with a requirement of
this section.

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