USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing view: We’re bringing new urgency to this crisis

- Elinore F. McCance-Katz Elinore F. McCance-Katz is assistant secretary for Mental Health and Substance Use in the Health and Human Services Department.

President Trump directed the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to declare a historic public health emergency regarding the opioid crisis last Oct. 26. But every day since I arrived to run the federal government’s behavioral health agency, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion (SAMHSA), and every day since the president took office, America’s opioid crisis has been treated as an emergency situation.

As the former chief medical officer of a state struggling with the crisis and former chief medical officer of SAMHSA, I can say with confidence that this administra­tion has brought a new, desperatel­y needed level of urgency to the crisis our families and communitie­s are suffering from every day.

Three months after the president took office, HHS launched a new comprehens­ive strategy for combating the opioid crisis. In 2017, partly thanks to extra funding in a bill signed by President Trump, the entire federal government devoted more than $1 billion specifical­ly to this effort — including assistance for first responders to receive lifesaving overdose reversing drugs.

We are also pursuing new ways to empower state agencies and civil society through technical assistance, adopting a more individual­ized approach and replacing a dysfunctio­nal federal registry of practices and programs with a Policy Lab that will provide actionable knowledge. HHS is also answering the president’s call to focus on public awareness, beginning the market research and message-testing we know is necessary for such campaigns to succeed.

We at HHS are exploring every avenue for action we have under the public health emergency declaratio­n. For example, we are working with the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion on how to expand access to addiction treatment through telemedici­ne.

Each day, we are working to empower Americans in their individual and local battles against this crisis — and with them, we will turn the tide on this epidemic.

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