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Thursday, April 20, 2017

Trump Administration awards grants to states to combat opioid crisis

HHS will administer grants totaling $485 million to all 50 states
Secretary Price sends letter to governors: “Through a sustained focus on people, patients, and partnerships, I am confident that together we can turn the tide on this public health crisis."
Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, M.D. today announced that HHS will soon provide $485 million in grants to help states and territories combat opioid addiction. The funding, which is the first of two rounds provided for in the 21st Century Cures Act, will be provided through the State Targeted Response to the Opioid Crisis Grants administered by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).
The funding will be issued to all 50 states, the District of Columbia, four U.S. territories, and the free associated states of Palau and Micronesia. Funding will support a comprehensive array of prevention, treatment, and recovery services depending on the needs of recipients. States and territories were awarded funds based on rates of overdose deaths and unmet need for opioid addiction treatment.

Secretary Price sent a letter to governors whose states are receiving grants and outlined his and the administration’s firm commitment to address the opioid crisis as each state and territory across the country works to address the significant health, social, and economic consequences. In his letter to governors, Secretary Price wrote, in part:
“As I begin my tenure as Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), I do so with a profound commitment to addressing this public health crisis as one of our top three Departmental priorities. Opioids were responsible for over 33,000 deaths in 2015; this alarming statistic is unacceptable to me. We cannot continue to lose our nation’s citizens to addiction. Through a sustained focus on people, patients, and partnerships, I am confident that together we can turn the tide on this public health crisis."
“President Trump recently announced the President’s Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis. This Commission is tasked with studying the scope and effectiveness of the federal response to this crisis and providing recommendations to the President for improving it. HHS is uniquely positioned to contribute in this important effort as a key agency providing critical resources for care and treatment.”
In the letter, Secretary Price commits to continue working with governors to combat the evolving opioid crisis and to ensure federal funding supports clinically sound, effective, and efficient programs, stating:
“These grants aim to increase access to treatment, reduce unmet need, and reduce overdose related deaths. I understand the urgency of this funding; however, I also want to ensure the resources and policies are properly aligned with and remain responsive to this evolving epidemic. Therefore, while I am releasing the funding for the first year immediately, my intention for the second year is to develop funding allocations and policies that are the most clinically sound, effective and efficient. To that end, in the coming weeks and months, I will seek your assistance to identify best practices, lessons learned, and key strategies that produce measureable results. Thank you for your collaboration and partnership as we move forward in this critical work together to help the millions of Americans hurt by this public health crisis.”
To combat the ongoing opioid crisis, HHS has prioritized five specific strategies: strengthening public health surveillance, advancing the practice of pain management, improving access to treatment and recovery services, targeting availability and distribution of overdose-reversing drugs, and supporting cutting-edge research.
To view a breakdown of first year funding by states and territories, please see the table below.
StateAward Amount
Alabama$7,967,873
Alaska$2,000,000
Arizona$12,171,518
Arkansas$3,901,297
California$44,749,771
Colorado$7,869,651
Connecticut$5,500,157
Delaware$2,000,000
District of Columbia$2,000,000
Florida$27,150,403
Georgia$11,782,710
Hawaii$2,000,000
Idaho$2,000,000
Illinois$16,328,583
Indiana$10,925,992
Iowa$2,728,077
Kansas$3,114,402
Kentucky$10,528,093
Louisiana$8,167,971
Maine$2,039,029
Maryland$10,036,845
Massachusetts$11,742,924
Michigan$16,372,680
Minnesota$5,379,349
Mississippi$3,584,702
Missouri$10,015,898
Montana$2,000,000
Nebraska$2,000,000
Nevada$5,663,328
New Hampshire$3,128,366
New Jersey$12,995,621
New Mexico$4,792,551
New York$25,260,676
North Carolina$15,586,724
North Dakota$2,000,000
Ohio$26,060,502
Oklahoma$7,283,229
Oregon$6,564,425
Pennsylvania$26,507,559
Rhode Island$2,167,007
South Carolina$6,575,623
South Dakota$2,000,000
Tennessee$13,815,132
Texas$27,362,357
Utah$5,537,458
Vermont$2,000,000
Virginia$9,762,332
Washington$11,790,256
West Virginia$5,881,983
Wisconsin$7,636,938
Wyoming$2,000,000
TerritoryAward Amount
American Samoa$250,000
Micronesia$250,000
Northern Marianas$250,000
Palau$250,000
Puerto Rico$4,811,962
Virgin Islands$250,000

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10 comments:

  1. How can this work when pot is becoming legal which leeds to opiod use ? waste of my tax $.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kool aid LEADS to ignorance.

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    2. 8:03 😂😂 You win the thread of the day!

      Delete
  2. Pot does not lead to opioid use any more than cigarettes or alcohol. What leads to opioid use is despair, lack of opportunity for an education or advancement and bad life choices. This money will used in the same manor as the Reagan war on drugs and will send addicts and low level dealer/users to prison. Good thing is that unlike busting crack dealers/users in the 80's, opioid abuse is not a minority problem as it claims all races and socioeconomic levels.

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  3. shouldn't the drug companies being paying for this since they are the ones responsible for creating the problem in the first place?
    they made billions pushing their pills and we get stuck with the bill?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Its ILLEGAL and the feds need to do raids and arrests WITHOUT the help of local police since the states are NOT Enforcing it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. "War on Drugs" as long as I can remember that term has been around. Has it done any good, I don't know. Sad...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. So let your kids go on it ? Hypocrite.

      Delete

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