USA TODAY US Edition

Trump: Opioid deaths ‘a tremendous problem’

But president does not declare crisis a national emergency

- Gregory Korte Contributi­ng: Herb Jackson, Bergen Record

President Trump on Tuesday stressed the importance of prevention and law enforcemen­t in a briefing on the opioid crisis at his New Jersey golf course, but stopped short of declaring the state of national emergency that his own opioid commission has recommende­d.

Health Secretary Tom Price said the administra­tion has the resources it needs to combat the epidemic without invoking the emergency powers.

“The president certainly believes we should treat it as an emergency, and it is an emergency,” Price told reporters after meeting with Trump. “Look, when you have the capacity of Yankee Stadium or Dodger Stadium dying every single year in this nation, that’s a crisis that had to be given incredible attention, and the president is giving it that attention.”

A formal declaratio­n of a public health emergency — or a presidenti­al emergency declaratio­n — would give the administra­tion additional powers to waive health regulation­s, pay for treatment programs, and make overdose-reversing drugs more widely available.

But Price said those powers are intended more for shorterter­m, localized public health crises.

Reading a statement to reporters from a working vacation at his Bedminster National Golf Club, Trump called overdose deaths “a tremendous problem in our country.”

“Nobody is safe from this epidemic that threatens all — young and old, rich and poor, urban and rural communitie­s. Everybody is threatened,” Trump said.

“The best way to prevent drug addiction and overdose is to prevent people from abusing drugs in the first place. If they don’t start, they won’t have a problem,” he said.

Trump cast the issue as largely a law enforcemen­t problem, noting that federal drug prosecutio­ns have declined over the last five years. “So they looked at this surge and they let it go by. We’re not letting it go by,” he said.

His remarks also made no mention of treatment, despite a top recommenda­tion from the Commission on Combating Drug Addiction and the Opioid Crisis that the U.S. “rapidly increase treatment capacity.” The commission found that only 10% of drug treatment facilities provide medication-assisted treatment for opioid abuse.

“Nobody is safe from this epidemic that threatens all — young and old, rich and poor, urban and rural communitie­s. Everybody is threatened.”

President Trump

One commission member, Democratic North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, has called for “law enforcemen­t-assisted diversion” of addicts into treatment.

“We cannot arrest our way out of this problem,” he said during the July 31 meeting of the commission.

White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said the president understand­s that a strategy will require effort on multiple fronts.

“The problem is very complicate­d, and currently we are on the losing side of this war,” she said.

Opioids include heroin and prescripti­on drugs such as oxycodone and hydrocodon­e. Overdoses attributed to these drugs claim an average of 142 lives a day, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

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