Texarkana Gazette

Drug panel calls for emergency declaratio­n

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WASHINGTON—President Donald Trump’s drug commission has called on him to declare a national emergency to deal with the country’s opioid drug epidemic.

The commission sent an initial report to the Republican president on Monday saying the approximat­ely 142 deaths each day from drug overdoses mean the death toll is “equal to September 11th every three weeks.”

The report is “meant to give the president some immediate steps that he can take to try to make sure that we stop the death that is happening across the country,” said Republican New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who was appointed by Trump to lead the group.

The White House said it will “immediatel­y begin reviewing its recommenda­tions.”

Besides declaring a state of emergency, the recommenda­tions include:

n Addressing regulation­s, including enforcing requiremen­ts that health plans provide the same level of services for those with physical health issues as those with mental health and substance abuse issues.

n Equipping all law enforcemen­t officers with the overdose reversal drug naloxone.

n Providing money for federal agencies to develop sensors that can detect the synthetic opioid fentanyl, which has led to an increase in overdose deaths.

n Increasing use of medication­s approved for treating opioid addiction in prisons.

n Requiring doctors, physician assistants and nurse practition­ers in federally qualified health centers to get waivers to prescribe buprenorph­ine, a medication for opioid addiction.

n Achieving data sharing among state prescripti­on drug monitoring programs by July 1, 2018.

Christie made fighting drug addiction a cornerston­e of his failed 2016 presidenti­al campaign and has dedicated his last year in office to the issue. Many of the recommenda­tions mirror efforts that he has undertaken in New Jersey.

Monday’s report came a couple of weeks after a group of U.S. Senate Democrats wrote to the acting director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy urging him to “consider important initiative­s that could help deliver faster relief to millions of Americans.”

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