Wisconsin Code § 256.40

Opioid antagonists
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(1) In this section:
(a) “Fire fighter” means any person employed by the state or
any political subdivision as a member or officer of a fire department or a member of a volunteer fire department, including the
state fire marshal and deputies.
(b) “Law enforcement agency” means an agency of a federally
recognized Indian tribe or band or a state or political subdivision
of a state, whose purpose is the detection and prevention of crime
and enforcement of laws or ordinances.
(c) “Law enforcement officer” means any person employed
by a law enforcement agency who is authorized to make arrests
for violations of the laws or ordinances that the person is employed to enforce.
(d) “Opioid-related drug overdose” means a condition including extreme physical illness, decreased level of consciousness,
respiratory depression, coma, or the ceasing of respiratory or circulatory function resulting from the consumption or use of an
opioid, or another substance with which an opioid was combined.
(2) (a) Subject to par. (b), the department shall permit all
emergency medical services practitioners to administer naloxone
or another opioid antagonist to individuals who are undergoing or
who are believed to be undergoing an opioid-related drug
overdose.
(b) The department shall require emergency medical services
practitioners to undergo any training necessary to safely and
properly administer naloxone or another opioid antagonist as
specified under par. (a).
(c) Every ambulance service provider shall do all of the
following:
1. Ensure that every emergency medical services practitioner
under the ambulance service provider’s supervision who has obtained the training necessary to safely and properly administer
naloxone or another opioid antagonist has a supply of naloxone or
the other opioid antagonist available for administration when he
or she is performing his or her duties as an emergency medical
services practitioner, to the extent that naloxone or the other opioid antagonist is available to the ambulance service provider.
2. Require each certified emergency medical responder and
emergency medical services practitioner under the supervision of
the ambulance service provider to, in the manner prescribed by
the department, keep a record of each instance in which the certified emergency medical responder or emergency medical services practitioner administers naloxone or another opioid antagonist to an individual who is undergoing or who is believed to be
undergoing an opioid-related drug overdose.
3. Submit records under subd. 2. to the department in the
manner prescribed by the department.
(3) (a) A law enforcement agency, county jail, or fire department may enter into a written agreement to affiliate with an ambulance service provider or a physician for all of the following
purposes:
1. Obtaining a supply of naloxone or another opioid
antagonist.
2. Allowing law enforcement officers, jailers or keepers of a
jail or persons designated with custodial authority by the jailer or
keeper, and fire fighters to obtain the training necessary to safely
and properly administer naloxone or another opioid antagonist to
individuals who are undergoing or who are believed to be undergoing an opioid-related drug overdose.
(b) A law enforcement officer, jailer or keeper of a jail or person designated with custodial authority by the jailer or keeper, or
fire fighter who, reasonably believing another person to be undergoing an opioid-related drug overdose, administers naloxone or
another opioid antagonist to that person shall be immune from
civil or criminal liability for any outcomes resulting from the administration of the opioid antagonist to that person, if the law enforcement officer, jailer or keeper of a jail or person designated
with custodial authority by the jailer or keeper, or fire fighter is
acting pursuant to an agreement and any training obtained under
par. (a).

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