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The goal of the program is to support evidence-based services related to substance use disorders. The county will receive nearly $10.3 million in annual allocations through 2038.
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Across Indiana, numerous groups support people living in recovery from addiction. They provide services like peer support groups and educational resources. Many also provide harm reduction services – things like fentanyl strips to identify the presence of the deadly substance, and naloxone, a lifesaving medication that reverses overdoses.
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The “Stitching Away Stigma” program provides people who use substances with handmade drawstring bags that can be filled with clean syringes and the overdose reversal medication naloxone.
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More than $50 billion in opioid settlement dollars from drugmakers, distributors and pharmacies is starting to flow to state and local governments, and they need to figure out how to spend it.
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Many who work on the frontlines of the overdose crisis want to see more emphasis on reducing the risk of illness and death from substance use. But in some communities, they face opposition.
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Indiana is directing nearly $2 million towards an effort to reach Hoosiers most at-risk of drug overdoses.
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The harm reduction initiative from Damien Center is in partnership with the Marion County Public Health Department.
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About 350 people from around the state attended the Public Health Conference lead by Indiana University's Addictions Crisis Grand Challenge.
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Indiana legalized syringe exchange programs in 2015, but requires county governments to re-approve them every two years.