Health Care

The White House Now Has A Plan To Fight The Opioid Crisis

The White House commission on opioids has released its final recommendations for addressing the crisis.

The White House Now Has A Plan To Fight The Opioid Crisis
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The White House's commission on tackling drug addiction and the opioid crisis unveiled its final report, and it's full of new recommendations for the administration.

The report doesn't tackle the issue of new funding for the crisis — instead, it recommends existing federal money be turned into block grants to give local authorities more leeway in how that money is spent.

Getting A Fix: Tackling New Synthetic Drugs
Getting A Fix: Tackling New Synthetic Drugs

Getting A Fix: Tackling New Synthetic Drugs

Since early 2010, the DEA's Special Testing and Research Laboratory has identified over 400 new psychoactive substances.

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One major focus is on managing prescription opioids. The commission called for more education for patients and doctors on the risks of opioids, as well as crackdowns on doctor incentives to prescribe opioids.

The report also recommends removing treatment barriers for opioid abusers and promoting the use of special drug courts, which channel addicts convicted of crimes into treatment programs rather than jail.

President Trump previously declared the opioid crisis a public health emergency. That move helped the government redirect some funds to fighting the crisis but stopped short of unlocking federal disaster funds.