- U.S. health officials on Thursday said they will spend $350 million in four states to study ways to best deal with the nation’s opioid crisis on the local level, with a goal of reducing opioid-related overdose deaths by 40 percent over three years in selected communities in those states.
The National Institutes of Health will award grants to research sites in Kentucky, Massachusetts, New York and Ohio, NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins said at a news conference to unveil the plan. They will go to the University of Kentucky, Boston Medical Center, Columbia University and Ohio State University.
The plan calls for the research centers to work with at least 15 communities hard hit by the crisis to measure how integrating prevention, treatment and recovery interventions can reduce overdoses. “The most important work to combat our country’s opioid crisis is happening in local communities,” U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said.
It is time.
Safe injection sites. Legal, safe, regulated supply. Harm reduction.
How about shutting their mouths instead of taking them? Same with the rest of drugs. They're not victims: they have a will.
How about shutting their mouths intead of taking them? Same with the rest of drugs. They're not victims: the have a will.
Start prosecuting the people that’s behind pushing these pills 💊 and stop 🛑 talking about it justsayin
It's a waste of resources. People choose to use and abuse drugs and medicines knowing the consequences so let them go right ahead and keep doing what they are doing. It's THEIR choice. Leave them alone.
One step would be to prescribe less.
Stop over prescribing to white people. Stop ignoring pain from people who aren't white. Promote alternative healing methods that don't wipe out patient's bank accounts.
Legalize marijuana. Done. You’re welcome
But please start with occupants of White House
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