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2016 Postmortem

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elleng

(130,865 posts)
Sun Dec 27, 2015, 01:58 PM Dec 2015

O'Malley discusses ways to fight opiate crisis. [View all]

Last edited Sun Dec 27, 2015, 04:45 PM - Edit history (1)

Candidate calls for 'continuum of care'

'O’Malley discussed what he would do as president to help states address the opiate abuse epidemic. He has put forth a plan for combating opiate addiction he says would cut by 25 percent the number of U.S. overdose deaths within five years.

“A first step would be to stop the overprescribing of these very potent pain medications,” he said, adding, “the FDA made a big mistake in greenlighting the prescribing of these very addictive medications.”

O’Malley said he would push for a federal investment of $12 billion to help states provide the “continuum of care” that many are lacking to keep people on a safe path after detox or hospitalization and prevent relapses. He also would create a national strategy on fentanyl – the synthetic opioid much more powerful than heroin and has claimed more lives than heroin this year – within 100 days of taking office, he said.

Pointing to his record as mayor in Baltimore, where he expanded drug treatment availability by 20 percent, O’Malley said, “I promised not only to improve policing, but to improve treatment and I’ll be damned some of these government programs don’t actually work … We saved a lot of lives.”

“We struggled a lot, frankly,” he added. “We switched our goal to reducing overdose deaths.”

O’Malley said the most important indicator of whether a person is at risk for overdosing is if they have presented themselves at an emergency room with a “near-miss” once. That point, O’Malley said, is where intervention needs to happen.

The federal government will need to help states build a continuum of care to provide addicts with a safe place for a short-term detox, and readily available 28-day residential programs, he said. He stressed the importance of recovery communities, like one recently proposed for downtown Portsmouth, and said he realizes the difficulties such centers can face with neighboring residents and zoning regulations.

“What works best is to get them paired up with a church or someone respected in the community … You have to pair those with your nonprofits that are there with representatives in the community so neighbors know who they can go to when there are problems,” he said.'>>>

http://www.seacoastonline.com/article/20151227/NEWS/151229428

Look for part two of this interview focusing on foreign policy in Tuesday’s Exeter News-Letter, the Portsmouth Herald and on Seacoastonline.com.

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thanks rbrnmw Dec 2015 #1
You're welcome, rbrnmw. elleng Dec 2015 #8
Fuck that. Opiates are not over prescribed. cali Dec 2015 #2
This politician DOES have a clue. elleng Dec 2015 #4
No, he evidently doesn't cali Dec 2015 #5
No clue, right, elleng Dec 2015 #7
No clue about those of us who need opiates to control severe chronic pain cali Dec 2015 #23
Cali, most of those "hoops" and newly rigorous enforcement Hortensis Dec 2015 #17
Thanks for jumping in, Hortensis. elleng Dec 2015 #21
Sure. I suspect some here may have real, personal Hortensis Dec 2015 #24
Yes, it seems like that, elleng Dec 2015 #25
thank you for explaining this so well rbrnmw Dec 2015 #22
So many tragedies. We suspect a supposed accidental OD of Hortensis Dec 2015 #26
Yes, I realize there is a real problem cali Dec 2015 #29
I think he is the strongest one on this issue rbrnmw Dec 2015 #9
Thanks again. elleng Dec 2015 #10
thank you for posting about MO'M rbrnmw Dec 2015 #12
Yes he does get lost in the shuffle. elleng Dec 2015 #14
I need to start reccing and replying to these posts rbrnmw Dec 2015 #16
Thanks, every 'rec' and 'reply' helps! elleng Dec 2015 #20
Damn it, when I have serious pain cheapdate Dec 2015 #3
I want Tylenol with codeine for toothaches. elleng Dec 2015 #6
Whatever works. cheapdate Dec 2015 #18
Overprescription? Making it harder for people who suffer from chronic pain aikoaiko Dec 2015 #11
Yours are NOT the definitions of 'overprescription.' elleng Dec 2015 #13
I've already seen too many people with real pain be denied pain meds because... aikoaiko Dec 2015 #15
This is clearly an example of a 'policy' being misapplied. elleng Dec 2015 #19
And it happens to a huge number of people with a legitimate need. cali Dec 2015 #30
Prescription Painkiller Deaths Fall Almost 25% in Medical Marijuana States Bluenorthwest Dec 2015 #27
medical cannabis legalization law O'Malley signed into law... bigtree Dec 2015 #31
So why isn't he talking about it at all? He wants to reduce opiate overdoses, we have Bluenorthwest Dec 2015 #32
Heroin epidemic is blowback from the Afghanistan War Dems to Win Dec 2015 #28
Opiate crisis? Moral Compass Dec 2015 #33
Ding a freaking ling ghostsinthemachine Dec 2015 #35
Huh? Moral Compass Dec 2015 #36
How about they try fixing all the pain ghostsinthemachine Dec 2015 #34
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