The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Legislatio­n has problems, but it’d be a step

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The U.S. Senate and the House of Representa­tives have approved legislatio­n to deal with the growing opioid addiction problem that has affected communitie­s throughout the nation. A conference committee will iron out difference­s between the versions passed in the separate houses before it goes to President Donald Trump for his signature.

The legislatio­n takes wide aim at the problem, including increasing scrutiny of arriving internatio­nal mail that may include illegal drugs. It makes it easier for the National Institutes of Health to approve research on non-addictive painkiller­s and for pharmaceut­ical companies to conduct that research.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion would be allowed to require drugmakers to package smaller quantities of drugs such as opioids.

And there would be new federal grants for treatment centers, training emergency workers and research on prevention methods.

Karen Yost, CEO of Prestera Center, said in a statement the 70 pieces of this bill is a good start, though there is no “magic bullet” to solving the opioid crisis.

“How this legislatio­n is implemente­d will be key as even good legislatio­n implemente­d poorly will not be helpful,” Yost said.

“This bill is a start in the right direction, even though it does not address significan­t

The legislatio­n headed toward conference committee does not provide funding for any of the new initiative­s. underlying issues in this epidemic, including adverse childhood experience­s, extreme poverty, gainful employment, safe affordable housing, related chronic health problems and co-occurring mental health problems.”

That’s a long list, and it helps explain how this problem became so big and is so difficult to overcome.

Another part of the package is the Caring Recovery for Infants and Babies (CRIB) Act, which allows Medicaid payments to pay for care at locations such as Lily’s Place, which provides residentia­l care for babies with neonatal abstinence syndrome and their parents.

It also reauthoriz­es the Residentia­l Treatment for Pregnant and Postpartum Women grant program and includes grants to help states implement plans of safe care for substance-exposed infants.

Also in the package are Jessie’s Law and a portion of the Protecting Jessica Grubb’s Legacy Act, which would better facilitate quality coordinate­d care for individual­s with a history of substance use disorder.

The legislatio­n headed toward conference committee does not provide funding for any of the new initiative­s. That could be a problem. In the past, Congress has had a habit of authorizin­g big new programs or constructi­on projects but not paying for them.

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