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Best questions for police officer survey about narcan training and use

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Adam Sabla

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Aug 23, 2025

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Here are some of the best questions for a police officer survey about Narcan training and use, plus tips to build your own. We know from experience—tools like Specific help you generate thoughtful surveys in seconds, so you can focus on getting real insights fast.

Best open-ended questions for police officer survey about Narcan training and use

Open-ended questions let officers share detailed feedback, capture stories, and surface issues you may not expect. They work best when you want rich, qualitative insight – especially on sensitive or complex topics like Narcan training, where experiences and attitudes may vary widely.

Why do these matter? After launching Narcan training, studies show officers report not just more knowledge, but also nuanced changes in confidence and on-the-job behavior—details you’ll only hear if you ask the right open questions. For example, in a Michigan study, officers’ confidence and knowledge rose sharply after web-based Narcan training (median knowledge scores increased from 35 to 40, with confidence up from 18.5 to 20) [2].

  1. Describe an experience you've had responding to an opioid overdose. What role did Narcan training play?

  2. Can you walk me through a recent situation where you administered Narcan? What went well, and what was challenging for you?

  3. What aspects of the Narcan training did you find most practical or useful in real-life incidents?

  4. Was there anything missing from the Narcan training that you wish had been included?

  5. How confident do you feel using Narcan in the field? What influences your confidence level?

  6. How has Narcan training changed the way you approach overdose scenes compared to before?

  7. What obstacles, if any, do you face when carrying or using Narcan as part of your daily duties?

  8. What additional support or resources would help you use Narcan more effectively as an officer?

  9. Have you encountered reluctance—your own or among colleagues—about using Narcan? What do you believe drives this?

  10. If you could improve Narcan training for future police officers, what would you change?

How to ask the best single-select multiple-choice questions

Single-select multiple-choice questions are great when you want to quantify trends, quickly identify knowledge gaps, or break the ice before diving deeper. Sometimes officers might find it easier to select from a few concise options—then you can dig deeper with follow-up questions as needed. This style is also useful if you want clear stats to share with leadership or advocate for program changes.

Question: How would you rate your confidence in administering Narcan?

  • Very confident

  • Somewhat confident

  • Neutral

  • Somewhat unconfident

  • Not confident at all

Question: How often have you administered Narcan in the last 12 months?

  • Never

  • Once or twice

  • Three to five times

  • More than five times

  • Other

Question: Are all officers in your department equipped with Narcan?

  • Yes, all officers

  • Most officers

  • Some officers

  • No officers

When to followup with "why?" After someone selects an option—especially on topics like confidence or frequency—it’s smart to ask “why?” in a conversational follow-up. For example, if an officer says they’re “neutral” about their confidence, a follow-up like “Can you explain what makes you feel neutral?” will unlock real, actionable feedback.

When and why to add the "Other" choice? Include an “Other” option when the set of answers may not capture everyone’s reality. This lets officers share unique experiences or edge cases. If they select “Other,” follow up: “What’s your situation?”—these answers often reveal process gaps or creative workarounds you’d otherwise miss.

Why an NPS question could be valuable for Narcan training surveys

NPS, or Net Promoter Score, asks how likely someone is to recommend a training (or practice) to others on a scale from 0 to 10. It’s a fast, powerful measure of how police officers perceive the value of Narcan training—and it gives you a way to benchmark improvements over time across departments and training types. Given that Illinois chiefs report nearly half of officers are primary naloxone administrators during incidents [3], asking, “How likely are you to recommend Narcan training to other officers?” can surface both enthusiasm and barriers. Use a tailored NPS survey for police officers about Narcan training and use to make it actionable and comparable.

The power of follow-up questions

If you want richer context, nothing beats smart follow-up questions. With the automatic follow-up questions from Specific, your survey becomes more like a real conversation—one that adapts to every police officer’s answer and probes deeper.

  • Police officer: “I’m not always comfortable using Narcan in public.”

  • AI follow-up: “Can you share why you feel uneasy using Narcan around bystanders—what concerns come up for you?”

Without a follow-up like this, you’d never know if the issue is concern about public perception, procedural uncertainty, or equipment limitations.

How many followups to ask? Typically, 2-3 follow-ups is the sweet spot. You want to draw out important context without fatiguing respondents. Specific’s platform lets you set a maximum, and can automatically skip follow-ups if the officer’s answers are already clear.

This makes it a conversational survey—respondents feel heard, not interrogated, which keeps them engaged and leads to better, deeper insights.

AI survey response analysis is now simple: With lots of open-text responses, AI makes analyzing the feedback easy and fast. See how with the AI survey response analysis guide.

Automated follow-ups are still new—if you haven’t tried this, generate your own survey and see how much better the feedback gets.

How to craft ChatGPT prompts for Narcan training survey questions

The fastest way to brainstorm great survey questions is to ask a capable AI for help—and prompts are the key. Start simple:

Ask ChatGPT:

Suggest 10 open-ended questions for police officer survey about Narcan training and use.

But to get truly relevant questions, add more context about your goals and situation:

I’m creating a survey for city police officers about their experiences with Narcan training and use. Our goal is to uncover challenges, boost confidence, and identify training gaps. Suggest 10 detailed open-ended questions that draw out actionable insights and examples.

Next, organize ideas further:

Look at the questions and categorize them. Output categories with the questions under them.

Then, double-down on what matters most for your program:

Generate 10 questions for categories: Confidence in administration, Training effectiveness, Resources needed.

What is a conversational survey?

Conversational surveys aren’t your standard static forms—they use AI to ask and adapt in real time, creating a natural back-and-forth. With Specific, your police officer survey about Narcan training becomes a chat-like experience that feels personal and engaging—drawing out richer stories and unearthing details you’d miss in bland forms.

Manual Surveys

AI-Generated Conversational Surveys

Static forms with fixed questions

Adaptive questions using AI and context

No real-time follow-up

Automatic follow-up to clarify or probe deeper

Respondent engagement drops off fast

Feels human—officer is heard, not just counted

Requires heavy manual analysis

AI summarizes responses and uncovers trends

For a head start on this new experience, try the AI survey generator, which builds a conversational survey from just a prompt.

Why use AI for police officer surveys? AI adapts to the complexity of frontline police experiences—across departments, roles, and individual calls. It bridges the gap between large-scale surveys and the depth of a live interview, providing results that leadership can trust to inform policy and training.

Whatever your level of experience, creating a survey with Specific’s best-in-class conversational approach is the easiest way to launch and learn in less time.

See this Narcan training and use survey example now

Ready to dig deeper? Build your own Narcan training and use survey to access richer police officer feedback in less time—powered by dynamic AI follow-ups and conversational insights.

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Sources

  1. National Library of Medicine. Naloxone engagement and training evaluation with Western Australia police officers: A pilot evaluation.

  2. National Library of Medicine. A mixed methods evaluation of web-based naloxone training for law enforcement officers in Michigan.

  3. Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority. The administration of naloxone by law enforcement officers: A statewide survey of police chiefs in Illinois.

Adam Sabla - Image Avatar

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.

Adam Sabla

Adam Sabla is an entrepreneur with experience building startups that serve over 1M customers, including Disney, Netflix, and BBC, with a strong passion for automation.