Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump to fight opioids ‘until our job is done’

- BY KEVIN FREKING AND DARLENE SUPERVILLE

ATLANTA — President Donald Trump pledged Wednesday to battle the deadly epidemic of opioid drug abuse “until our job is done” and he claimed progress even though it is unclear whether the crisis has diminished.

Trump spoke at an annual conference of health, law enforcemen­t, elected and other officials who work to combat drug abuse and addiction, and used the appearance to advocate for the wall he wants to build on the U.S.-Mexico border, saying it will help keep drugs out of the U.S. His wife, Melania, introduced him.

“My administra­tion is deploying every resource at our disposal to empower you, to support you and to fight right by your side,” Trump said. “We will not solve this epidemic overnight but we will stop [it]. … We will never stop until our job is done.”

Before leaving the White House for the Atlanta event, Trump claimed credit for progress in combating the drug scourge.

“It’s a big problem. It’s a big addiction and we’re handling it,” the president told reporters. “We’ve made a tremendous amount of progress.” He said doctors, laboratori­es, clinics and drug companies have assisted the administra­tion.

While there have been signs of progress, including a drop in the number of prescripti­ons for opioid painkiller­s, it remained unclear whether the problem is on the decline.

Opioid abuse claimed a record of nearly 48,000 American lives in 2017. An estimated 2 million people

are addicted to the drugs, which include both legal prescripti­on pain medication­s and illegal drugs such as heroin.

While prescripti­on opioids initially accounted for most deaths, the epidemic is now driven by illicit heroin and fentanyl. Those two drugs were implicated in the vast majority of opioid overdoses reported in 2017, according to federal figures.

Keith Humphreys, a drug policy adviser to presidents from both political parties, said some states are making progress, but not because of action by Trump. Humphreys said other states have regressed.

Humphreys said Trump’s declaratio­n of opioids addiction as a public health emergency in 2017 failed to translate into significan­t concrete action. Members of Congress, he said, “figured out they were going to have to do it themselves and they did.”

Trump said the administra­tion has committed $6 billion to combat the crisis, set aside money to prevent youth substance abuse, and increased the distributi­on of the overdose-reversing drug naloxone.

“Pretty amazing stuff,” the president said.

He talked about allowing states to use Medicaid dollars to pay for residentia­l treatment, legislatio­n to help women and babies born dependent on opioids, and treatment for veterans.

The first lady spoke briefly about her visits to hospitals and treatment centers and her meetings with doctors and nurses as part of her own campaign to highlight the “terrible toll the opioid epidemic is having on children and young mothers.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOHN AMIS ?? President Donald Trump takes the podium after first lady Melania Trump, left, spoke Wednesday during the RX Drug Abuse & Heroin Summit in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO/JOHN AMIS President Donald Trump takes the podium after first lady Melania Trump, left, spoke Wednesday during the RX Drug Abuse & Heroin Summit in Atlanta.

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