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Incredible facts about progress on opioid epidemic

Posted on 4/29/19 at 5:21 am
Posted by Lsujacket66
Member since Dec 2010
5031 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 5:21 am
HHS Fact Sheet: Combating the Opioid Crisis
LINK

The opioid crisis is the most daunting and complex public health challenge of our time. However, under the President’s leadership, in just two short years, the nation has made real progress—progress that is saving lives every day.

Just over one year ago in New Hampshire, the President emphasized the importance of reducing unnecessary opioid prescriptions, expanding treatment, and boosting naloxone access. Through these initiatives, lives are being saved and we’re beginning to win the fight against this crisis.

The President pledged to “cut nationwide opioid prescriptions by one-third.”
From the President’s inauguration in January 2017 through February 2019, initial market data suggests that the total amount of opioids being prescribed monthly has dropped by 34 percent. While we need more data to confirm this snapshot, it shows we may have succeeded in meeting this goal already.
This success was achieved while the administration also emphasized the importance of appropriate opioid prescribing for patients experiencing severe pain, and supported the use and development of non-opioid treatments.


The President pledged “to get lifesaving help to those who need it,” and highlighted the life-saving, opioid reversing drug called naloxone.
From January 2017 to February 2019, we have led a 484 percent increase in naloxone prescriptions dispensed by pharmacies.
The Surgeon General issued a historic advisory urging more Americans to carry naloxone, producing a 27 percent boost in prescribing immediately after the advisory.
The President promised to expand the availability of treatment for Americans struggling with addiction, and we know that medication-assisted treatment is the standard of care for opioid use disorder.
From January 2017 to February 2019, there has been a 23 percent increase in patients receiving buprenorphine and a 42 percent increase in prescriptions for naltrexone.
Community health centers funded by HRSA saw a 64 percent increase in patients receiving MAT from 2016 to 2017.
We’ve awarded over $350 million in grants to support a whole-of-government effort in four different states to reduce overdose deaths by 40 percent in their communities within three years, as part of the NIH HEALing Communities Study.
This initiative will help communities in Ohio, Kentucky, New York, and Massachusetts mount a comprehensive response to this crisis.
We’ve heard that the most effective responses to this crisis are when entire communities come together—doctors, nurses, cops, courts, teachers, mayors, employers, parents, coaches, young people, social workers, faith leaders—everybody. That is the kind of response we’re investing in with the HEALing Communities study.
In 2018, HHS awarded more than $2 billion in grants to support state, local, and tribal governments, health centers, and other entities in providing prevention, treatment, and recovery services.

With Mrs. Trump as our champion for children, we are developing and testing new treatments for newborn victims of opioid use during pregnancy: NIH has been supporting research into neonatal abstinence syndrome and HHS has launched an initiative to better track and understand outcomes and treatments for infants with this challenge.


All of these efforts are finally having results:
Nationwide, there has been a 3.3% decrease in CDC’s provisional overdose death counts from the 12-month period ending one year earlier.


As reported last week, the 12-month rolling count of provisional overdose deaths dropped below 70,000 for the first time in a year.
In New Hampshire, where the President first announced his opioid initiative, drug overdose deaths are down 9.5% in the last 12 month reporting period. Elsewhere, Pennsylvania was down 18.5% and Ohio was down 21.7%
Through mid-2018, nationwide, opioid overdoses treated in emergency departments decreased by 15 percent.
From 2015 to 2017, the number of Americans with a pain reliever use disorder dropped by 300,000.
In 2017, the number of first time users of heroin decreased significantly.


From the health perspective: We’re winning this battle, but we haven’t won yet.
This crisis developed over two decades, and it will not be solved overnight.
All Americans should think about ways to help those struggling with addiction – it is not a moral failing, but something we know how to treat.
Posted by Vastmind
B Ara
Member since Sep 2013
5322 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 5:36 am to
Suboxone is it’s own special kind of hell. People need to let their nuts hang and go cold turkey.
Posted by idlewatcher
Planet Arium
Member since Jan 2012
92768 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:09 am to
quote:

Elsewhere, Pennsylvania was down 18.5% and Ohio was down 21.7%


That is amazing. Kills me to see those photos of dads or moms passed out in their cars with needles in their arms and their very own kids in the backseat.

Keep it up and MAGA
Posted by Lima Whiskey
Member since Apr 2013
22594 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:13 am to
Drug use isn’t the problem, it’s the symptom of an underlying problem.

Fix these communities, give people hope, and a respectable way to live, they’ll stop using.
This post was edited on 4/29/19 at 7:14 am
Posted by MrCarton
Paradise Valley, MT
Member since Dec 2009
20231 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:19 am to
quote:

From the health perspective: We’re winning this battle, but we haven’t won yet.
This crisis developed over two decades, and it will not be solved overnight.


Want to see the Sacklers perp walked.
Posted by trinidadtiger
Member since Jun 2017
18832 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:22 am to
Looks like incredible efforts and results.

However, I gotta say, (and I am a huge Trump fan), when he says he will decrease by a third and the CDC announces 33.3% less OD deaths.....me thinks the govt hired some unemployed global warming statiticians to do their own "cooking" show...Im just sayin.
Posted by dr smartass phd
RIP 8/19
Member since Sep 2004
20387 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:23 am to
Fentanyl and its cousins need to be classified as WMD's. Dilaudid does the job.
Posted by Muleriderhog
NYC
Member since Jan 2015
3116 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:25 am to
quote:

Fix these communities, give people hope, and a respectable way to live, they’ll stop using.

That isnt how addiction works.
Posted by MrCarton
Paradise Valley, MT
Member since Dec 2009
20231 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:25 am to
quote:

However, I gotta say, (and I am a huge Trump fan), when he says he will decrease by a third and the CDC announces 33.3% less OD deaths.....me thinks the govt hired some unemployed global warming statiticians to do their own "cooking" show...Im just sayin.


Good instincts IMO.
Posted by Broke
AKA Buttercup
Member since Sep 2006
65359 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:30 am to
I have a movement condition that required 2 oxycodone per day. I took the same amount for 10 years. The doctor got scared and said I had to stop taking them. So I did. Now I take 14 other pills per day to get the same impact as the 2 oxycodone. And she prescribed me Narcan (just in case). I needed fricking Narcan for 2 oxycodone per day? My pharmacist actually called me and the doctor to say Narcan for me seemed crazy and ridiculous. The pharmacist said if she were me she wouldn't fill the script so I didn't. I'm one of the ones who never failed a drug test, took my meds as prescribed, went to the best neuromedical doctors in Baton Rouge and I suffer now because of these idiots and addicts. I'm the other side of the war on opiates. The data is wrong. They add in heroin users along with people like me. To them we are the same. Flawed data
This post was edited on 4/29/19 at 7:47 am
Posted by TheHarahanian
Actually not Harahan as of 6/2023
Member since May 2017
23158 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 7:34 am to

That's all great news.

Now when can I have my pills?
Posted by Lima Whiskey
Member since Apr 2013
22594 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 8:04 am to
It is.

In aggregate, drug addiction is a proxy for social misery.

So it’s no surprise that the most hopeless places in America caught on fire, when they got easy access to opiates.
This post was edited on 4/29/19 at 8:05 am
Posted by Walkthedawg
Dawg Pound
Member since Oct 2012
11466 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 9:02 am to
I was at my doctors office the other day and she shared with me the database that was instituted at the beginning of the year. She found that some of her patients were double and triple dipping with other doctors. She immediately cut them off and they tried to give her all kind of excuses, but she told them she would not prescribe medicine for them anymore.

Now the rest of us have to go through a hassle of getting our legitimate medicine because of all these addicts.
Posted by Robin Masters
Birmingham
Member since Jul 2010
35066 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 9:09 am to
Posted by Bjorn Cyborg
Member since Sep 2016
34138 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 9:09 am to
Less Narcan would be a good step. If you get to the point you’re ODing, you’re lost anyway.

Most of these people are not saveable. Their minds are fried to the point of no recovery. Even off drugs they are zombies.
Posted by Broke
AKA Buttercup
Member since Sep 2006
65359 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 10:36 am to
quote:

Less Narcan would be a good step. If you get to the point you’re ODing, you’re lost anyway.

Most of these people are not saveable. Their minds are fried to the point of no recovery. Even off drugs they are zombies.


This is a terrible way to think. I bet 50% of those people were good and decent people at one point. They could be good and decent people again with help. But they have to be willing and want the help. And I bet if you asked them if they wanted a do-over I would say 95% would say YES. I could see how you can easily get sucked into that lifestyle. One that I never let myself get sucked into because I knew it only caused financial ruin, pain and hardship.
Posted by 14&Counting
Dallas, TX
Member since Jul 2012
41499 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 10:45 am to
quote:

I'm one of the ones who never failed a drug test, took my meds as prescribed, went to the best neuromedical doctors in Baton Rouge and I suffer now because of these idiots and addicts. I'm the other side of the war on opiates. The data is wrong. They add in heroin users along with people like me. To them we are the same. Flawed data


Word - these assholes are screwing it up for everyone else who legit needs it. I had to take a trip to the emergency room and got a fat bill because the doctor wouldn't prescribe pain meds after an in office surgical procedure. I was in so much pain I had to go to the emergency room and they ended up prescribing some anyway. Took as directed and then stopped.

frick these addicts and their lack of control.
This post was edited on 4/29/19 at 10:47 am
Posted by StrongSafety
Member since Sep 2004
18000 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 10:48 am to
quote:

The opioid crisis is the most daunting and complex public health challenge of our time


Crack cocaine was. This isn't.
Posted by StrongSafety
Member since Sep 2004
18000 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 10:51 am to
Im well aware of the horrors of the opioid crisis and all those suffering from it. I empathize with them.

But i cant help but languish over how we humanized these addicts and criminalized the crack addicts and have made no real amends or reparations towards those folks. Its debased at its core.

We need to see the humanity and struggle in all people, and not criminalize some for acts we will later humanize in others.
Posted by TigerBait1971
PTC GA
Member since Oct 2014
16110 posts
Posted on 4/29/19 at 10:53 am to
Opioid crisis is racist!
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