Recent News

Nation's drug czar highlights Baltimore's efforts at curbing drug addiction (Baltimore Sun)

Just days from the end of his tenure as the nation's drug czar, Michael Botticelli visited Baltimore's health department on Tuesday to highlight the efforts of local officials to combat the nation's opioid epidemic and warn against a scaling back of health insurance coverage for addiction treatment.

Millions of people have gained access to addiction treatment through insurance provided under the federal Affordable Care Act, he said. That's now under threat from the GOP-led Congress and the incoming administration of Donald Trump, which have pledged to repeal the law known as Obamacare.

As fatal overdoses continue to climb in Maryland and across much of the country, Botticelli said more treatment is needed, not less.

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Drug czar concerned for opioid treatment if ACA is repealed (WBALTV 11)

The nation's outgoing drug czar fears more people will die because they can't afford opioid treatment if the Affordable Care Act is repealed.

 

Michael Botticelli visited Baltimore on Tuesday to talk about the Obama administration's efforts on the opioid epidemic and how a looming repeal of the Affordable Care Act could impact treatment.

The recent explosion in heroin addiction and death across the United States has happened under Botticelli's leadership. He spent Tuesday in Baltimore, where, in 2016, opioid overdose deaths outnumbered homicides.

"I think, quite honestly, we have tried to respond to the evolving nature of this epidemic at every step along the way," Botticelli said.

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Trauma & Mental Health: BCHD Convenes Community-based Meeting

BCHD Hosts Trauma and Mental Health Citywide Meeting

On Wednesday morning, over 120 residents and representatives from community-based organizations, foundations, businesses, nonprofits, and service providers assembled to discuss trauma and mental health in Baltimore City. We convened the first in a series of meetings to better understand how the community defines and experiences trauma in order for the department to build better policies and programs that emphasize and lift up the work already happening in the community. As a result, we will build a citywide plan to address trauma in our communities.

Commissioner's Corner: The ACA Safeguards Life

As Baltimore City’s doctor, I have seen firsthand how the Affordable Care Act (ACA) supports my patients and their lives. This week, I shared my experience both as a physician and as a public health leader about the ACA in an op-ed in The HillA Health Commissioner's Perspective: The ACA Safeguards Life.

A health commissioner's perspective: The ACA safeguards life (The Hill)

The start of the 115th Congress has focused on the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Legislators speak about repealing a policy, about political strategies. 

For me, as a doctor, as Baltimore City’s doctor, it’s about my patients and their lives.

Eight years ago, before the ACA, I treated a 36-year old man, a father of two toddlers. He stopped taking his seizure medications because insurance companies wouldn’t cover him. He had a choice: pay thousands of dollars a month, out of pocket, or ensure that his family had rent and food. As many others would have done, he chose his family, and let his medications lapse.

By the time he was brought to the ER, he had suffered a grand mal seizure. He was unconscious and continually seizing. We gave him medications. We put a breathing tube in. We did everything we could, but he never came out of the coma, and he died.

I think about him and his family when I hear discussions of the ACA. I think about the 40,000 people in my city who would be uninsured if not for the ACA. My patients tell me that they’re scared.

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The Opioid Epidemic—from the headlines to hope (WHYY)

The news can sound dire. Opioid addiction is ruining families and taking lives at an ever increasing rate. In this roundtable discussion, Dr.

Some Maryland grocery stores will start accepting SNAP for online orders (Technical.ly Baltimore)

Online grocery shopping brings convenience. But if it’s available to everyone, it’s also seen as one way to help people in food deserts get access to fresh food.

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Maryland’s inclusion earned praise from Baltimore City Health Commissioner Leana Wen.

“Unfortunately, 1 in 4 Baltimore City residents live in an area identified as a food desert,” she said. “This pilot will break down barriers and bring groceries to people, saving them time and money.”

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Baltimore City Health Commissioner Issues Statement in Response to SNAP Pilot Program

BALTIMORE, Md. (January 6, 2017)—Today, Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen issued the following statement in response to U.S. Department of Agriculture’s selection of three grocers in Maryland for a program designed to allow Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) participants to purchase their groceries online.  

Health Commissioner Dr. Wen Declares Code Blue Alert in Baltimore Beginning Friday Night through the Weekend

BALTIMORE, MD (January 6, 2017) — With temperatures predicted to fall into the teens with wind chill this weekend, Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen today issued a Code Blue declaration for Baltimore City beginning Friday evening, January 6th through the morning of Monday, January 9th.

Commissioners Corner: New Year Resolutions in Public Health

The start of a new year is the time for resolutions to improve health and wellbeing. Like the many who will focus on creating a healthier lifestyles—whether it is trying to eat better, adding some steps to your pedometer, or finally getting back to the gym—we at BCHD resolve to continue working every day to make Baltimore a healthier city for all residents.

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