The Sentinel-Record

Trump readies opioid plan

- CARLA K. JOHNSON JILL COLVIN

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s long-awaited declaratio­n that the opioid epidemic is a national emergency finally arrives this week, but some advocates are worried that it won’t be backed with the money and commitment to make much difference.

Trump is expected to make the formal declaratio­n and deliver a major speech on the topic Thursday, more than two months after he first announced that would be his plan.

There is concern the White House actions will be empty talk without a long-term commitment to paying for more addiction treatment: An emergency declaratio­n would lack punch without money, said Andrew Kessler, who represents substance abuse treatment providers as a lobbyist in Washington.

“If there’s no new money to expand our treatment infrastruc­ture, I don’t know what the punch is going to be,” Kessler said. He acknowledg­ed that declaring a national emergency “would put it in the national spotlight. Create buzz. Create talk.” But with news coverage of the opioid crisis already saturating front pages and newscasts, he said, “I don’t know how much more buzz we can generate.”

Some health advocates also worry that devoting more public health resources to opioids could pull attention and resources from other health problems such as cancer, diabetes and heart disease. What’s needed, they say, are new funding streams and a willingnes­s to work hand-in-hand with states and local government­s.

“An emergency declaratio­n without significan­t new funds will likely be unsuccessf­ul. The problem is enormous and requires a similar investment in a comprehens­ive strategy that includes primary prevention,” said Becky Salay, director of government relations at Trust for America’s Health, a Washington-based public health research and advocacy organizati­on.

The idea of declaring a national emergency was first raised in an interim report prepared by an opioid commission chaired by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and convened by the president earlier this year.

“The first and most urgent recommenda­tion of this commission is direct and completely within your control. Declare a national emergency,” read the report from the group, which argued the move would empower Trump’s Cabinet to address the crisis and force Congress to dedicate more money

to fighting overdose deaths.

Trump said back in August he planned to adopt the recommenda­tion, and claimed his team was working on documents to formalize the declaratio­n. But his words spurred immediate pushback from some inside his administra­tion who argued it wasn’t the best move.

Emergency declaratio­ns are typically reserved for natural disaster like hurricanes, infectious diseases like swine flu and bioterrori­st threats like anthrax, and Trump’s now-departed Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price argued publicly that the administra­tion could deploy the needed resources without a formal declaratio­n.

As the weeks have passed, Christie appeared to grow impatient, telling an audience in New Jersey earlier this month that it wasn’t “good that it hasn’t been done yet.”

The Office of National Drug Control Policy defended the administra­tion’s handling of the matter, saying Trump’s policy advisers, along with relevant government agencies, have been “working tirelessly since the beginning” to respond to the opioid crisis.

With an estimated 142 Americans dying every day from drug overdoses, more than 10,000 people have died in the weeks since the president first committed to the plan.

At a commission meeting last week, no overt reference was made to the president’s promise, but members stressed the need to act.

“We ought to be treating this like a FEMA response and getting the necessary medication,” said former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, who argued that, if the drug crisis were Ebola, “we’d waive all the rules and we’d say get it done and start saving lives, I mean that’s what we need.”

“That’s what we’ve been saying,” Christie responded. The New Jersey governor later compared the response to the AIDs epidemic.

“I still have not seen the passion for this epidemic that I saw in the AIDS epidemic,” Christie said.

The commission had suggested two mechanisms for an emergency declaratio­n: the Public Health Service Act or the Stafford Act. The nation has a public health emergency fund, but it is empty, Kessler said.

If the emergency is declared instead under the Stafford Act, funding could be included with disaster relief for hurricanes and wildfires. But that would put the opioids emergency under the jurisdicti­on of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which is under the Department of Homeland Security.

“All that money could go to border security and drug interdicti­on, rather than toward treatment,” Kessler said.

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