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State Health Officials Commend Public Health Emergency Declaration to Address Opioid Epidemic

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State Health Officials Commend Public Health Emergency Declaration to Address Opioid Epidemic ARLINGTON, VA—Members of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO) joined President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump today at the White House for a meeting declaring the nation’s opioid crisis a public health emergency.  “While emergency declarations are normally reserved for natural disasters or infectious disease outbreaks, the President’s announcement recognizes the work that states and territories are already undertaking to address the crisis and will allow for increased collaboration and coordination of regional and federal assets across the country for an even more effective response,” says John Wiesman, ASTHO president and secretary of health at the Washington State Department of Health. “We hope the public health emergency declaration, combined with future additional federal investments in substance abuse treatment and prevention, will lead to fewer deaths and better health for all Americans.” State and territorial health officials have been at the frontlines of this crisis working to address the many facets of the epidemic. Six states have already declared emergencies in their jurisdictions: Alaska Arizona, Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, and Virginia. “While federal leadership has been working hard in partnership with states to address this crisis, many states have taken executive and legislative action to address the epidemic including implementing new laws and regulations around prescribing and providing additional funding for treatment services and evidence-based public health interventions to prevent substance misuse in the first place,” says Michael Fraser, ASTHO’s executive director. “The federal emergency adds to the work that states and territories have been doing in many different ways across the country.” Treating and preventing substance use disorders and addiction is very complex. “Opioid addiction is challenging because many people first become addicted when receiving the medications through the healthcare system. Addiction is not a moral failing on the part of the individual; it is a health condition we must address in healthcare and across all sectors as a society at the national, state, and community levels,” says Jay Butler, ASTHO’s immediate past president and chief medical officer for the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services. “Addiction is treatable and, more importantly, preventable with appropriate evidence-based interventions. The declaration today will help us respond even more effectively to the loss of life and devastating impact of substance misuse and addiction.” ASTHO, in partnership with the National Association of State Alcohol and Drug Abuse Directors (NASADAD), recently released a framework on public health responses to the opioid crisis that was developed to assist health officials in combating the epidemic. As federal agencies and Congress look to implement their response to this public health emergency, ASTHO urges national leaders to provide additional resources focusing on both treatment and prevention of addiction. “This is a crisis we ultimately are not going to arrest—or treat—our way out of; instead, we have to prevent our way out of this,” adds Fraser. “Like any public health emergency, addressing this problem calls for important steps to prevent the disease in the first place. We hope that the President and First Lady’s attention to the opioid epidemic will help us focus on both treatment and prevention. That is the work of public health, and states and territories are committed to mustering all resources available to end this epidemic.” ASTHO Press Release Boilerplate website yes

Health Officials and Attorneys General Convene to Discuss Legal and Public Health Solutions to Opioid Epidemic

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Health Officials and Attorneys General Convene to Discuss Legal and Public Health Solutions to Opioid Epidemic ARLINGTON, VA—The Association of State and Territorial Health Officials (ASTHO) and the National Attorneys General Training and Research Institute, a branch of the National Association of Attorneys General, held an inaugural three-day summit with health officials and attorneys general on Nov. 14-16 to promote coordination across public health, law enforcement, and medical professionals to address opioid abuse and misuse, an epidemic that claims the lives of 78 people each day and has now become one of the nation’s most urgent public health threats. At the meeting, health officials and attorneys general discussed the importance of working together to change the conversation about people with substance use disorders, and the need to move from punitive approaches toward compassionate, evidence-based treatment. Health and law enforcement officials are intensifying efforts to improve prescribing practices, apply effective regulatory and enforcement measures, and eliminate stigma and misconceptions about individuals who seek addiction treatment. “We need to reframe the conversation about addiction, from one about bad choices and moral failings to one about chronic health conditions that affect the brain,” says Jay Butler, ASTHO president and chief medical officer for the Alaska Department of Health and Social Services. “Together, public health and law enforcement officials have a critical role to play in ending this epidemic that continues to devastate our families and communities.” ASTHO’s 2017 President’s Challenge, led by Butler, centers around public health approaches to preventing substance misuse and addictions. Through the challenge, ASTHO will unite and rally state health officials, affiliates, and other cross-sector partners to take action on this critical and urgent public health issue within states and communities. State health officials will work to expand primary prevention efforts in their states to educate consumers, prescribers, families, policymakers, and other partners about opioid use, and address risk factors in communities to reduce demand for drugs and other addictive substances. U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy and Office of National Drug Control Policy Director Michael Botticelli also delivered remarks on Monday, calling for greater integration of substance use disorder services into the healthcare system so that addiction can be treated with the same precision and urgency as other health conditions like diabetes, heart disease, or cancer. Nationally recognized experts and thought leaders from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, the American Medical Association, and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health also described federal and state policy options, strategies for engaging medical professionals, and promising community-based prevention initiatives. ASTHO Press Release Boilerplate website yes