The Oklahoman

House looks at numerous campaign-season bills battling opioid abuse

- BY ALAN FRAM

WASHINGTON — The House dove Tuesday into a two-week vote-a-thon on dozens of bills aimed at opioid abuse, as lawmakers try to tackle a crisis that’s killing tens of thousands a year and to score a popular win they can tout for the midterm elections.

A handful of the measures are contentiou­s, including one Republican bill that would create new criminal penalties for making or traffickin­g certain synthetic drugs containing fentanyl. That powerful opioid can be made illegally and is taking a growing toll. Democrats complain that the legislatio­n would give the government unfettered power to decide which drugs would be banned, without scientific input.

Most of the 39 bills scheduled for votes this week and dozens more next week are modest and also bipartisan — testament to the deadly toll the problem is inflicting in urban Democratic and rural Republican areas alike. They include one allowing the government to repay up to $250,000 in student loans for some drug treatment workers who agree to serve in areas with especially severe problems. Others would prod health care providers to prominentl­y display in their records when a patient has substance abuse problems, and create grants to help hospitals open opioid treatment centers with a wide range of services.

Congress would have to provide actual money for the new programs in later bills — a difficult task, even for popular programs, with annual federal deficits expected to soon surpass $1 trillion.

Nearly 64,000 people died from drug overdoses in 2016, including around two-thirds whose deaths involved opioids, according to the most recent figures from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An estimated 11.8 million people misused opioids that year, mostly by abusing prescripti­on pain relievers. Opioids are natural or synthetic drugs that can be prescribed for pain relief, but they can also be made illicitly or legally provided prescripti­ons can be abused.

West Virginia had the highest death rate from drug overdoses in 2016, with Ohio, New Hampshire, the District of Columbia and Pennsylvan­ia close behind. In sheer numbers of deaths, California, Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia all saw more than 4,000 fatal drug overdoses that year.

The death toll has more than tripled since 2000, when around 17,000 people died from drug abuse. That’s made the issue a top campaign-season priority for both parties. Despite enacting two significan­t bills on the subject in 2016 — and Congress providing additional billions to combat opioids in this year’s government-wide spending bill — lawmakers are eager for another round.

Republican­s have conceded that the bills won’t eliminate the opioids problem but say they will make a difference. “This killer doesn’t discrimina­te. Not by age, not by race, not by where you live or what you believe,” said Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

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