Facing
Addiction in America: The Surgeon General’s Spotlight on Opioids calls for a
cultural shift in the way Americans talk about the opioid crisis
and recommends actions that can prevent and treat opioid misuse and
promote recovery.
The
Spotlight – the Surgeon General’s newest update on opioid addiction
– also provides the latest data on prevalence of substance misuse,
opioid misuse, opioid use disorder and overdoses.
The
Surgeon General today also released a digital postcard,
highlighting tangible actions that all Americans can take to raise
awareness, prevent opioid misuse and reduce overdose deaths.
“Addiction
is a brain disease that touches families across America – even my
own,” said U.S. Surgeon General Jerome M. Adams. “We need to work
together to put an end to stigma.”
According
to preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, overdose deaths in 2017 increased by almost 10 percent
– claiming the lives of more than 70,000 Americans.. Nearly 48,000
of those were opioid overdose deaths, with the sharpest increase
occurring among deaths related to illicitly made fentanyl and
fentanyl analogs (synthetic opioids).
Despite
the fact that effective treatment for opioid use disorder exists,
only about one in four people with this disorder receive any type
of specialty treatment. Yet for a variety of reasons, including
stigma, inability to access or afford care, or refusal to stop
misusing opioids, a treatment gap remains.
In
addition, the existing healthcare workforce is understaffed, often
lacks the necessary training, and has been slow to implement
Medicated-Assisted Treatment, as well as prevention, early
identification, and other evidenced-based recommendations.
“Now is
the time to work together and apply what we know to end the opioid
crisis,” said Dr. Elinore McCance-Katz, Assistant Secretary for
Mental Health and Substance Use. “Medication-assisted treatment
combined with psychosocial therapies and community-based recovery
supports is the gold standard for treating opioid addiction.”
The
federal government has been working with key stakeholders to
address this problem and is seeing real progress. This week, HHS
disbursed more than $1 billion in opioid-specific funding for
states, which includes State Opioid Response grant programs administered
by SAMHSA to support a comprehensive array of prevention,
treatment, and recovery services. Additional funding from the
Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) went to
community health centers to increase access to substance abuse disorder
and mental health services, to increase the number of professionals
and paraprofessionals who are trained to deliver integrated
behavioral health and primary care services as part of health care
teams in HRSA-supported health centers as well as to rural grantees
to increase services and develop plans to implement evidence-based
opioid use disorder prevention, treatment and recovery
interventions. There are signs that efforts to stem the opioid
crisis are having success, with the use of medication-assisted
treatment growing significantly and the number of Americans
initiating heroin use dropping significantly from 2016 to 2017.
“Addressing
the opioid crisis with all the resources possible and the best
science we have is a top priority for President Trump and for
everyone at HHS,” said HHS Secretary Alex Azar. “Surgeon General
Adams has been a leader in raising awareness about the nature of
addiction and the effectiveness of medication-assisted treatment,
complementing the support HHS provides for access to treatment and
recovery services.”
“Today’s
announcement is another step forward in our efforts to educate the
American public about steps they can take to prevent addiction,”
said Assistant Secretary for Health Brett P. Giroir, M.D, who also
serves as the HHS Senior Advisor for Opioid Policy. “We are making
progress. Just last week we released the 2017 National Survey on
Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) data, which showed significantly more
people received treatment for their substance use disorder in 2017
than in 2016. This was especially true for those with
heroin-related opioid use disorders.”
The
science shows us that no area of the United States is exempt from
the opioid crisis. Yet, only 53 percent of the public consider
opioid addiction a major concern. As a result, the Surgeon General
is calling on all individuals to do the following:
- Talk about opioid misuse. Have
a conversation about preventing drug misuse and overdose.
- Be safe. Only take opioid
medications as prescribed, make sure to store medication in a
secure place, and dispose of unused medication properly.
- Understand pain and talk with
your healthcare provider. Treatments other than opioids can be
effective in managing pain.
- Understand that addiction is a
chronic disease. With the right treatment and supports, people
do recover.
- Be prepared. Get and learn how
to use naloxone, an opioid overdose reversing drug.
For the
full document and to view the digital postcard, visit http://addiction.surgeongeneral.gov.
If you
or someone you know is struggling with a substance use disorder,
call 1-800-662-HELP or visit http://www.samhsa.gov/find-help. |
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