Skip to content
    emergency medicine

    Opioid Overdose Medical Slides

    Generate publication-quality opioid overdose lecture slides in 30 seconds. AI-powered content structured for clinical education.

    Generate Opioid Overdose Deck

    Why teach Opioid Overdose?

    Opioid overdose deaths exceeded 80,000 annually in the United States by 2022, driven largely by illicitly manufactured fentanyl and its analogs. The classic opioid toxidrome — miosis, respiratory depression, and decreased consciousness — guides clinical recognition, though the potency of synthetic opioids has complicated management. Naloxone remains the cornerstone of treatment, but fentanyl-era dosing strategies, observation periods, and the increasing prevalence of polysubstance use require updated teaching approaches.

    Sample Lecture Slides

    What AI generates for Opioid Overdose

    Enter “Opioid Overdose” and SlideCraft generates a complete lecture deck with slides like these.

    01Opioid Toxidrome: Miosis, Respiratory Depression, CNS Depression, and Hypotension
    02Naloxone Dosing: IV/IM/IN Routes, Titration Strategy, and Fentanyl-Era Considerations
    03Synthetic Opioid Challenges: Fentanyl Potency, Delayed Absorption, and Recurrent Toxicity
    04Airway Management: BVM Ventilation Priority, Intubation Indications, and Aspiration Risk
    05Post-Reversal Monitoring: Observation Period, Renarcotization Risk, and Naloxone Infusion
    06Harm Reduction: Take-Home Naloxone, Safe Injection Sites, and MOUD Initiation in ED
    Try It

    See it in action

    Type any medical topic and watch AI generate a presentation slide in seconds. No signup required.

    3 free previews per hour · No account needed

    SlideCraft Preview

    Enter a topic and click Generate to see your AI slide

    Opioid Overdose Presentation FAQ

    How should naloxone dosing strategy be presented for fentanyl-era overdoses?

    Present the titrated approach: start with naloxone 0.04-0.4 mg IV (goal is adequate ventilation, NOT full arousal — aggressive dosing causes acute withdrawal with vomiting/aspiration and combative patients). For suspected fentanyl: may need higher total doses (up to 10-12 mg reported) due to potency and receptor binding affinity. IM: 0.4-2 mg (absorption slower, suitable for field). Intranasal: 4 mg (Narcan nasal spray, standard community distribution). Key teaching point: ventilate with BVM FIRST — naloxone has a 2-3 minute onset IV, and the patient needs oxygenation now. Repeat every 2-3 minutes as needed.

    What observation period evidence should be included for opioid overdose?

    Present the observation challenge: naloxone duration (30-90 min) is shorter than most opioids, creating renarcotization risk. Heroin: 1-hour post-naloxone observation generally sufficient if asymptomatic and ambulatory (Boyer 2005 criteria: can walk, normal vitals, GCS 15, no concern for coingestants). Fentanyl: extended observation warranted — transdermal patches and body-stuffing/packing can cause delayed/prolonged toxicity. Consider naloxone infusion (2/3 of effective bolus dose per hour) for patients requiring repeated doses. All patients who used alone, used IV, or whose substance is unknown should be observed for minimum 2-4 hours.

    How should ED-initiated MOUD be presented in overdose education?

    Present the paradigm shift to ED-initiated medications for opioid use disorder: the D'Onofrio 2015 JAMA trial showed buprenorphine initiation in the ED doubled engagement in addiction treatment at 30 days versus referral alone. Protocol: once opioid withdrawal confirmed (COWS ≥8-12), administer buprenorphine 4 mg SL, observe 1 hour, give additional 4 mg if tolerated, prescribe bridge supply with warm handoff to outpatient treatment within 72 hours. California bridge model and ACEP policy statement support this approach. Emphasize: every overdose is a reachable moment for OUD treatment engagement.

    Pricing

    Simple pricing, no surprises

    Start free today. Upgrade when your department needs more.

    MonthlyAnnualSave ~17%

    Free

    $0

    Try SlideCraft with no commitment

    • 2 decks per month
    • AI slides with speaker notes
    • View & present only (no export)
    • 7-day cloud storage
    • Slide Checker & Outline Generator
    Start Free
    Most Popular

    Pro

    $29/mo

    For clinicians who lecture weekly

    • 10 decks/mo + $2.50/extra
    • AI Critic Mode (5-axis review)
    • Document-to-deck (PDF upload)
    • PDF, PPTX, SCORM & image export
    • Permanent cloud storage
    Start Free, Upgrade Later

    Expert

    $59/mo

    For academic physicians who publish and present

    • 25 decks/mo + $2.00/extra
    • PubMed source verification
    • Paper-to-deck pipeline
    • Auto-citations (Vancouver)
    • Everything in Pro
    Start Free, Upgrade Later

    emergency medicine Slides

    Browse all emergency medicine lecture topics

    View specialty

    Your Opioid Overdose lecture is tomorrow. Your slides are already done.

    Enter a topic and let AI handle the rest — structure, content, and cinematic visuals included.

    Generate Your First Deck

    Start free · No credit card required

    We use cookies to improve your experience. Learn more