From Alaska To Florida, States Respond To Opioid Crisis With Emergency Declarations quoting : NPR

From Alaska To Florida, States Respond To Opioid Crisis With Emergency DeclarationsEnlarge this image toggle caption Marianne Williams/Getty Images Marianne Williams/Getty ImagesPublic health officials and others concerned about the nation's opioid crisis are hailing President Trump's decision to declare it a national emergency. Larry Hogan declared opioids a public health emergency in March. Massachusetts was the first state to declare opioids a public health emergency in 2014. Doug Ducey declared a public health emergency in June. Despite the emergency declaration, Florida, unlike some other states, hasn't tapped Medicaid to help pay for drug treatment.



From Alaska To Florida, States Respond To Opioid Crisis With Emergency Declarations
In Arizona, a June emergency declaration allowed officials to tap a public health emergency fund for additional resources. In Virginia, for example, authorities declared opioid addiction there a public health emergency right before Thanksgiving, hoping it would prompt families to discuss the problem over the holiday. "If that's not a national health emergency, I don't know what is," Christie said. But a spokesman for Christie declined to offer further details about how that negotiation would proceed or why it could only be done under an emergency declaration. The opioid crisis "is a very different type of emergency."Republished with permission from STAT.

Some States Say Declaring An Emergency Has Helped In The Opioid Fight

Some States Say Declaring An Emergency Has Helped In The Opioid FightEnlarge this image toggle caption Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty ImagesUpdate 3:35 pm August 10: Two days after making a few general remarks about the opioid crisis, President Trump on Thursday called it "a national emergency" and said his administration would be drawing up papers to make it official. While there has been debate among addiction treatment specialists over what a national emergency declaration would achieve, a handful of states have found the move helpful. The health news website STAT reports that six states have used disaster or emergency declarations in order to take more aggressive measures to fight opioids. Doug Ducey signed an emergency declaration in June, after the state reported that 790 Arizonans had died from opioid overdoses in 2016, an average of more than two per day. With the emergency declaration, Christ says the state has been able to train law enforcement on the use of naloxone, which helps reverse overdoses, and develop opioid prescribing guidelines.


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