The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Solution to world’s opioid epidemic will take an innovative combinatio­n

- By Jagdish Khubchanda­ni Jagdish Khubchanda­ni is a health science professor at Indiana’s Ball State University.

When it comes to opioids, the United States and nations around the world are well past the crisis point. Our jails are filled, rehab centers are overwhelme­d, families are being destroyed and lives are being lost.

The standard response to drug problems in communitie­s worldwide is to spend more on medical care and law enforcemen­t. But we’ve done nothing but create pipelines to already exhausted prisons and hospitals.

The total economic cost of prescripti­on opioid misuse alone is more than $75 billion per year in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This includes health care, lost productivi­ty, addiction treatment and crime. And opioids are just one component of the mammoth drug problem facing the nation.

Instead of pouring billions into law enforcemen­t and medical facilities, we have to find a sweet spot that will not only help people stop using opioids but also help them lead productive lives.

Recently, I advised a group of internatio­nal communitie­s on drug use issues. A unique concept we tested was the Peer Supported Vocational Networks (PVNs). These networks are managed by former drug users in recovery. The networks own their businesses, such as auto repair shops.

In these PVNs, newly recovered addicts are provided part-time employment, profession­al skills training and recovery support. Their finances and work are managed by PVN managers who have been in recovery for a longer duration and promoted as managers.

The longer the person is in recovery, the more likely they are to be promoted, given full-time opportunit­ies or chances to own and manage network businesses. The network is driven by recovering addicts. What is central is skill building, giving responsibi­lity, keeping recovering individual­s accountabl­e and rehabilita­tion to normal life.

Our analysis found the programs to be extremely successful — people actually recover and go on to lead productive lives.

I am urging our political and community leaders to look for an alternativ­e for the opioid crisis. Instead of repeatedly sentencing people to jail time, we should look at how overdose deaths and drug-related prevention practice and policymaki­ng can be integrated with employment and labor, housing and developmen­t, education and welfare, veterans and youth affairs, justice and correction­al facilities, social services and rehabilita­tion, and health and human services (all federal agencies or their divisions that should be involved).

Until and unless we see collaborat­ive actions between service agencies on the social determinan­ts of drug use and overdose deaths, eliminatin­g this national public health emergency remains elusive.

Our communitie­s have the capacity to change, and they will do so if leaders have the ability to implement innovative solutions to create pathways from drug use to normal life by combining medical care, rehabilita­tion and social services.

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Khubchanda­ni

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