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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Friday, May 26 2017

Full Issue

Budget Cuts Affecting Opioid Treatment Leave Families Feeling Betrayed By Trump

President Donald Trump "promised me, in honor of my son, that he was going to combat the ongoing heroin epidemic," one man who lost his son said of meeting the president. "He got me hook, line and sinker." Media outlets report on the epidemic in Massachusetts, Maryland, North Carolina and Ohio, as well.

The Associated Press: Trump Budget Dismays Families Hit By Opioid Addiction Crisis

He slept next to his son's ashes most nights back when Kraig Moss first met Donald Trump. In a hall packed with Iowa voters, the presidential candidate looked the middle-aged truck driver in the eye and vowed to fight the opioid crisis that killed his only son two years earlier. (5/26)

Boston Globe: At This Boston Medical Addiction Clinic, Many Of The Clients Are Teens

It’s called being “dope sick” — when someone’s tired of getting high and no longer wants to spend the day searching for drugs. Addiction medicine physician Sarah Bagley sees kids who already have reached that stage... By the time they’re at the CATALYST Clinic at Boston Medical Center, a program designed to treat young people struggling with substance use, their lives have started to unravel. (Atoji Keene, 5/25)

The Associated Press: Maryland Has New Law To Help Fight Opioid Addiction

Legislation to battle heroin and opioid overdoses in Maryland with education, prevention, treatment and law enforcement was signed into law Thursday by Gov. Larry Hogan. Matt and Cheryl Godbey, whose 24-year-old daughter Emily died in November from a fentanyl overdose, came from Frederick, Maryland, for the bill-signing ceremony. Matt Godbey applauded a new law that will bring stiffer penalties to drug dealers who knowingly sell fentanyl resulting in a death. Fentanyl is a painkiller that is often combined with heroin, with deadly results. (Witte, 5/25)

The Washington Post: ‘I Guess You Are Here For The Opium’: Investigator Stumbles Across $500 Million In Poppy Plants

Cody Xiong cracked open his door, saw the investigator on his porch and 'fessed up, authorities say. “I guess,” Xiong said, “you are here for the opium.” The investigator wasn't. But suddenly, he was intrigued. What followed was a massive opium bust, based entirely on a North Carolina poppy grower who thought prematurely that the jig was up. (Wootson, 5/25)

Cleveland Plain Dealer: U.S. Postal Service Pushes Back Against Portman Opioid-Trafficking Effort. He Says It Is Wrong 

Federal postal and State Department officials pushed back Thursday on a congressional proposal sponsored by Ohio U.S. Sen. Rob Portman to require advanced electronic tracking of all packages and large envelopes mailed to the United States .Portman and others in Congress say would help law enforcement stop deadly opiates from reaching dealers and users in a drug epidemic that last year killed 666 people in Cuyahoga County -- more than in homicides, suicides and car crashes. (Koff, 5/25)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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