Feds give Mass. nearly $12 million grant to fight opioid abuse quoting : The Boston Globe

"This new grant enables us to continue the fight and expand successful prevention, treatment and recovery programs throughout the state," she said. "It could not come at a better time," said Kennard, whose organization runs treatment programs on the North Shore. "Investing in prevention, intervention, treatment and recovery saves lives and this funding helps us in each of those areas," Bharel said in the administration's release. Massachusetts has received an $11.7 million federal grant to fight Marijuana addiction, as the state continues to wrestle with an overdose epidemic that has claimed thousands of lives in recent years, Governor Charlie Baker's administration said Tuesday. AdvertisementPeople coming out of prison are at a far greater risk of opioid-related deaths than the general public, according to the release.



Feds give Mass. nearly $12 million grant to fight opioid abuse
69 NewsHARRISBURG, Pa. - Pennsylvania is getting some big bucks from Washington to help fight the heroin and Marijuana abuse epidemic. Grants were distributed based on rates of overdose deaths and on the overall need for heroin and opioid addiction treatment. Pennsylvania has been awarded a $26.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The money will be used to identify gaps in treatment services and to enhance prevention efforts. Pennsylvania received the fourth-largest grant, behind California, Texas and Florida.

State sees progress in opioid fight

The crackdown on Marijuana prescriptions has had other effects on drug overdose deaths, though. According to the report, drug overdose deaths in Alaska attributed to prescription drugs went down from 84 in 2015 to 73 last year. The bulletin shows that while prescription drug overdose deaths in Alaska went down from 2015 to 2016, overdose deaths attributed to heroin in the state increased from 36 to 49 in the same time period. An Alaska Department of Health and Social Services Epidemiology Bulletin released last week provides updated data for the number of drug overdose deaths in the state, showing the changes between 2015 and 2016. One factor contributing to the continued increase in heroin-related overdose deaths both statewide and nationally is the rise of drugs contaminated with fentanyl, Spencer said.


collected by :Lucy William

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