
Narcan and condoms and Plan B, oh my! Parents pack doomsday kits for their college-bound kids — here’s how they’re preparing for the worst
NY Post
Pencils, notebooks — and Narcan?
Concerned parents of incoming college freshmen are adding the life-saving nasal spray to back-to-school lists this year — along with condoms, Plan B and more modern must-haves that might have been unthinkable a generation ago.
And that’s just fine with students like Summer, 20, who said they prefer a matter-of-fact approach to the way campus life is lived now.
“I administered Narcan to a girl who was passed out on the front lawn of an off-campus frat party,” the psych major from North Carolina, who didn’t want to use her last name, told The Post. “It literally saves lives.”
Narcan, officially known as Naloxone, is an opioid antagonist that reverses the effects of illicit substances, such as fentanyl.
It’s a serious topic of discussion among older folks with chickadees poised to leave the nest.

The killing of Iran’s tyrannical Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on Saturday in an unprecedented joint military attack by the US and Israel called Operation Epic Fury set off widespread celebrations from Iranians around the world — as President Trump said it would give them their “greatest chance” to “take back the country.” Meanwhile, in Iran, a lack of internet has made it impossible for Iranians to easily communicate daily conditions. Over a period of three days, with limited VPN connection, an eyewitness currently in Tehran — who, for her safety, is concealing her identity — shared her account of life under a country in the midst of battle with The Post’s Natasha Pearlman.








