Becker's Hospital Review : reported that Virginia governor signs 4 bills aimed to combat opioid epidemic

Virginia governor signs 4 bills aimed to combat opioid epidemicDemocratic Governor Terry McAuliffe on Thursday signed four bills into law crafted to reduce the human cost of the opioid epidemic in Virginia. More articles on opioids:Amid proposal to axe national drug policy office, advocates scramble to save itHeroin overdose deaths increase fourfold from 2010 to 2015Minnesota lawmakers introduce 5 bills to combat opioid epidemic© Copyright ASC COMMUNICATIONS 2017. While our overdose death statistics, sadly, continue to rise, each number represents a family that is suffering. We will use every tool we can get to continue this fight." "Abuse of opioids continues to kill Virginians," said Gov.


Virginia governor signs bills aimed at stemming opioid epidemic


Virginia governor signs bills aimed at stemming opioid epidemic
She previously worked at Chicago Public Media, the NPR affiliate in Chicago, where she served as news director after stints as a senior project editor for Front & Center and senior producer of Eight Forty-Eight with Steve Edwards. Aurora Aguilar assigns and edits news stories for Modern Healthcare magazine and its online newsletters. Prior to that, she covered crime, courts, business and municipal government for the Daily Herald in Arlington Heights and Elgin, Ill. She has won numerous awards from the Chicago Headline Club, the Associated Press and the National Association of Black Journalists among other organizations.

Governor signs bills to fight Virginia's opioid crisis

Terry McAuliffe signed five bills Thursday to help arm the fight against opioid abuse and fatal overdoses in Virginia. In November 2016, McAuliffe joined State Health Commissioner Marissa Levine in declaring the Virginia opioid addiction crisis to be a public health emergency. Here are more details on the bills McAuliffe signed into law:•SB 848, sponsored by Sen. Jennifer Wexton, D-Loudoun, and HB 1453, by Del. The governor also signed HB 2165, which will mandate all opioid prescriptions be transmitted to pharmacies electronically by 2020. Kelly said that electronic prescribing for controlled substances, or EPCS, helps the health care industry to reduce prescription fraud, drug diversion and drug abuse.



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