Oklahoma Code § 57-4.1

Title 57. Prisons And Reformatories: Administering medications
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A.  In addition to other medical and health care services
required by a jail facility as may be provided by rule by the State
Department of Health, the person responsible for administration for
a jail shall administer medications according to the following:
1.  Prescription medications shall be provided to the prisoner
as directed by a physician or designated medical authority.  The
prisoner shall be observed to ensure the prisoner takes the
medication.  The physician or designated medical authority shall be
particularly aware through his or her training of the impact of
opiate or methadone withdrawal symptoms that may occur in regard to
the mental and physical health of the prisoner.  The physician or
medical authority shall prescribe and administer appropriate
medications to the prisoner pursuant to Section 5-204 of Title 43A
of the Oklahoma Statutes as the medical authority deems appropriate
to address those symptoms.  Neither prescription nor over-the-
counter medications shall be kept by a prisoner in a cell with the
exception of prescribed nitroglycerin tablets and prescription
inhalers.  Over-the-counter medications shall not be administered
without a physician’s approval unless using prepackaged medications;
2.  Medical reception information shall be recorded on a printed
screening form approved by the physician or designated medical
authority which shall include inquiry into:
a. current illnesses and health problems including
medications taken and any special health requirements,
b. behavioral observation, including state of
consciousness and mental status,
c. body deformities and trauma markings such as bruises,
lesions, jaundice, and ease of body movement,
d. condition of skin and visible body orifices, including
infestations, and

e. disposition or referral of prisoners to qualified
medical personnel on an emergency basis; and
3.  For purposes of this section, “physician or other licensed
medical personnel” means a psychiatrist, medical doctor, osteopathic
physician, physician’s assistant, registered nurse, licensed
practical nurse, emergency medical technician at the paramedical
level or clinical nurse specialist.
B.  1.  Subject to the provision of emergency opioid antagonists
by the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services
under Section 1 of this act:
a. the Department of Corrections, upon the discharge of
an inmate from an institution within the Department
who has been diagnosed with an opioid use disorder,
regardless of whether that inmate has received
treatment for the disorder, shall provide the inmate,
as the inmate leaves the institution, with two doses
of an emergency opioid antagonist, and
b. a county jail:
(1) upon the discharge of any person who is confined
in the jail pursuant to a sentence who has been
diagnosed with an opioid use disorder, regardless
of whether that person has received treatment for
the disorder, or
(2) upon the discharge of any person who is confined
in the jail for an offense related to possession
of an opioid drug other than:
(a) a person who is confined in the jail
pursuant to a sentence, or
(b) a person who is being transferred to the
custody of the Department of Corrections,
shall provide the person, as the person leaves the
jail, with two doses of an emergency opioid
antagonist.
2.  Notwithstanding the provision of emergency opioid
antagonists by the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse
Services as provided by Section 1 of this act, the Department of
Corrections and county jails may stock and provide emergency opioid
antagonists to inmates or persons upon discharge from the
institution or jail as described in paragraph 1 of this subsection.
3.  Before the Department of Corrections or a county jail
provides an emergency opioid antagonist to an inmate or person as
described in paragraph 1 or 2 of this subsection, the Department of
Corrections or the jail shall ensure that the inmate or person is
provided with the opioid overdose education program provided by the
Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services under
Section 1 of this act.

4.  Nothing in this subsection is intended to abrogate or
supersede any existing authority of the Department of Corrections or
a county jail to administer an emergency opioid antagonist to a
person experiencing an opioid overdose.

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