The Columbus Dispatch

How to reduce opioids’ deadly toll

- — Chicago Tribune

At the end of the 20th century, Americans were worried about the dangers posed by crack cocaine. They didn’t realize that another drug menace would soon eclipse it. Prescripti­on opioids were gaining favor as a tool against undertreat­ed pain. No one foresaw where this would lead: to an epidemic of opioid overdoses that the nation is only starting to confront with the urgency it warrants.

Last year, some 64,000 people died of drug overdoses, most of them involving some type of opioid. That’s more than the total number of Americans killed during the Vietnam War. President Donald Trump recently acknowledg­ed the epidemic by declaring a public-health emergency. That step, if anything, understate­s the severity of this plague.

Earlier, Trump appointed a presidenti­al commission to analyze the problem and propose remedies. The panel has now issued a report stocked with strong recommenda­tions for action, which should focus needed attention.

The death toll is the worst effect of opioid abuse but hardly the only one. It puts a burden on hospitals, emergency responders and correction­al facilities, as well as employers. It sunders families and leaves children orphaned or in the care of grandparen­ts.

The commission has some good ideas. One is expanding access to treatment with methadone and buprenorph­ine. This is the most effective means of helping addicts overcome their dependence, but as the commission noted, “only 10.6 percent of youth and adults who need treatment for substance use disorder receive that treatment.” The grim fact is that many of those who go without treatment will eventually die of an overdose.

The commission credited Trump for tackling federal rules that impede states from increasing access to treatment through Medicaid.

It also urged Congress to consolidat­e funding for opioid and other substancea­buse funding into block grants, giving the states more flexibilit­y in how to address the problem. “This was a request to the commission by nearly every governor, regardless of party,” the report said.

One sensible proposal: increasing the use of drug courts, which divert some addicts into treatment instead of punishment. These have shown value in getting offenders to stay out of trouble and work at legitimate jobs. But 44 percent of U.S. counties lack an adult drug court. The commission urged that the Justice Department push states to make them universal.

Another proposal is less promising: an advertisin­g offensive to highlight the dangers of drug abuse. A lot of opioid abusers don’t start out in search of a high; they become dependent after taking legitimate medication­s prescribed by their physicians for acute pain.

The administra­tion and the panel may finally impel the American people and their elected officials to make a priority of reversing this epidemic.

“If a terrorist organizati­on was killing 175 Americans a day on American soil, what would you be willing to pay to make it stop?” Gov. Chris Christie, who chaired the commission, asked after submitting the report. “I think we’d be willing to do anything and everything to make it stop.” Anyone disagree?

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