Statement from Partnership for Drug-Free Kids in Response to Report from the President's Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis

NEW YORK, Nov. 2, 2017 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The President's Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and Opioid Crisis yesterday released its final report on the nation's opioid epidemic.

Partnership for Drug-Free Kids, a nonprofit that supports families who are struggling with their son or daughter's substance use, agrees with the report's call for much-needed increases in access to addiction treatment and recovery programs, expanding the availability of medication-assisted therapies, along with first responders' ability to administer the life-saving overdose reversal drug, naloxone.

Yet, for any of the 65 report recommendations to be enacted, and to see any progress in addressing the opiate crisis, a large infusion of additional funding is necessary. The report does not lay out a specific budget request to implement these recommendations. We call on the President to make sure that his budget includes the massive increase in funding necessary to implement these vital recommendations and seize on the opportunity to take decisive action to stem the tide of overdose deaths.

With 144 people dying every day in drug-overdose related deaths, 91 of which are directly related to opioids - and the White House declaring a nationwide public health emergency in response to the opioid epidemic just last week - yesterday's report offers substantive and concrete solutions to address this public health crisis. Solutions that we know from evidence and science to work will most likely fail without the necessary dollars and resources to support them. Key Congressional members will need to be dogged in supporting the proposals outlined in the report, ensuring that critical dollars are attached to their successful implementation.

In June, we were invited to testify before Governor Chris Christie, Chairman of the President's Commission, and we emphasized that a major factor in the unacceptably high number of overdose fatalities is the tragic reality that families are unable to find the support and resources they need to help a loved one who is struggling with a substance use disorder. The treatment system is incredibly difficult to navigate and, because of the soaring costs of treatment and the stigma that still surrounds addiction, families do not necessarily reach out for help.

The Partnership has a long history in working with partners, agencies and government officials at the federal, state and local levels to ensure that collectively, we are doing everything possible to drive down the number of overdoses and overdose deaths. We must all work together to provide services to all who need them and ensure that every family has access to support services - while also addressing the problem farther upstream, making sure that there are sufficient prevention and intervention programs in place.

Our Support for Families Facing the Opioid Crisis

The Partnership remains steadfast in our commitment to finding solutions to help end the opioid crisis:

    --  With funding and support from the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas
        (HIDTAs) in the eastern United States, we launched a comprehensive
        resource to help families and communities address the country's growing
        heroin and prescription drug abuse crisis. Heroin and Other Opioids:
        From Understanding to Action provides parents with information and
        support for their family and treatment resources for their loved one. A
        short, powerful animated film explains how someone can go from abusing
        prescription pain medicine to heroin use and the devastation this
        epidemic has had on our communities.


    --  In 2012, we launched the Medicine Abuse Project, creating a broad
        coalition of companies, federal agencies and nonprofits who continue to
        work together to drive down the misuse and abuse of prescription and
        over-the-counter medications. The Medicine Abuse Project's focus is
        reducing misuse and abuse of medication among teens, and the
        Partnership's work has already helped contribute to a 45 percent
        decrease in abuse of prescription pain relievers by high school seniors
        in the past five years.


    --  Our "Search and Rescue" prescriber education campaign, supported by the
        Food and Drug Administration (FDA), is helping prescribers nationwide
        link to their state Prescription Drug Monitoring Program, and other
        tools, to help identify and get help for patients at risk of misuse and
        abuse of prescription medications.


    --  Community education tools that we created with support from the Drug
        Enforcement Administration (DEA) have helped start a dialogue about
        local responses to this epidemic in communities across the country.


    --  Our medication-assisted treatment eBook offers families a complete and
        comprehensive overview of medication-assisted treatment, including how
        to find the right facility or treatment provider for their child.


    --  More than $140 million worth of "Mind Your Meds" public service
        announcements have already run to help raise awareness and bring
        attention to the dangers of misuse and abuse of medicines, while urging
        people to properly secure and dispose of medications in their homes.
    --  The Partnership's two documentary films - "Out of Reach" and "Breaking
        Points" - have been screened by close to 10,000 communities and
        individuals in all 50 states. These films have focused on teen misuse
        and abuse of prescription medicine, including opioids and stimulants.

The Partnership Empowers Families with Critical Information and Support

    --  Through the Partnership's Parent Helpline (1-855-DRUGFREE) and new,
        online live chat service, we have connected 10,000 families to bilingual
        master's level counselors who help them develop a plan to address their
        child's substance use.


    --  With our national network of parent coaches, the Partnership connects
        parents to others who have "been there" and can help them learn how to
        love their child through this health crisis and understand that "tough
        love" and "rock bottom" are not the only viable options.


    --  The Partnership has an active network of nearly 180,000 families, and
        through our website - drugfree.org - we provide 5 million families per
        year with the latest, cutting-edge scientific information distilled into
        actionable tips and tools to help them understand the disease of
        addiction, be better able to navigate the treatment system and get their
        child to accept help.


    --  Working with private sector partners like Google and Facebook, we help
        reach parents as they actively search for help online.
    --  In creating all of the Partnerships tools and resources, we use
        evidence-based concepts such as Community Reinforcement and Family
        Training (CRAFT) and motivational interviewing to help parents obtain
        the best possible outcomes for getting their child into treatment and on
        the path to recovery.

For more information, please visit drugfree.org.

About Partnership for Drug-Free Kids
Partnership for Drug-Free Kids is committed to helping families struggling with their son or daughter's substance use. We empower families with information, support and guidance to get the help their loved one needs and deserves. On our website, drugfree.org, and through our toll-free helpline (1-855-DRUGFREE), we provide families with direct support and guidance to help them address teen substance use. Finally, we build healthy communities, advocating for greater understanding and more effective programs to treat the disease of addiction. As a national nonprofit, we depend on donations from individuals, corporations, foundations and the public sector and are thankful to SAG-AFTRA and the advertising and media industries for their ongoing generosity. We are proud to receive a Four-Star rating from Charity Navigator, America's largest and most-utilized independent evaluator of charities, as well as a National Accredited Charity Seal from The Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance.

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SOURCE The Partnership for Drug-Free Kids