Texarkana Gazette

Trump opioid plan: Where are the specifics?

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President Donald Trump’s focus on America’s opioid epidemic is welcome. The awful scourge has doubled U.S. drug overdose fatalities over the past decade, leading to more than 64,000 deaths in 2016.

But the president’s speech Monday was only his latest exercise in vague rhetoric on the topic. Instead of specifical­ly discussing how his administra­tion would spend $6 billion that Congress has allocated to fight opioids, Trump offered unrealisti­c generaliti­es about wiping out all types of addiction, called for TV advertisin­g campaigns that hammer home the danger of opioids, and encouraged prosecutor­s to seek the death penalty for drug dealers.

In the president’s defense, yes, politician­s talk in cliches and anti-smoking TV ad campaigns have been effective, and, yes, invok- ing the death penalty sounds tough even if no laws will change. But what is his overarchin­g strategy to combat opioid abuse?

Some proposals seem obvious, starting with building a federal database that tracks which physicians overprescr­ibe opioids, funding research into and promoting awareness of less dangerous painkiller­s, and making the powerful anti-overdose drug naloxone much more available to first responders. Some issues are more complicate­d—for example, given state Medicaid programs’ crucial role in helping people fight addictions, the White House push to cut Medicaid funding seems problemati­c.

But after 14 months as president, Trump needs to get specific. Actions matter much more than words.

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