Recent News

Bad summer of tick-borne illnesses expected (WBAL)

With summer right around the corner, experts are expressing concerns over the threat of a bad season for tick-borne illnesses.

Can Federal and Community Support Solve the Opioid Problem? (U.S. News & World Report)

By May 18, more than 12,500 Americans had died from an opioid overdose in 2017 alone, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That's more than double the number of reported deaths from gun violence so far this year.

It's a staggering statistic, but opioid addiction is a problem without an easy, straightforward solution.

In order to address the crisis fully, steps need to be taken on both the supply and demand sides of the issue, says Dr. Leana Wen, Baltimore City's health commissioner and former emergency room doctor. And, she points out, there are other societal factors to consider.

"When we look at the data of where it is that people are dying of overdoses, where the rates of addiction have climbed most precipitously, those areas are also the ones that are hardest hit by unemployment, by housing instability, by individuals in communities with uncertain futures," Wen says. "This is an overall societal problem that we need to address."

Read the entire story. 

From Punishing Users to Treating a Disease (U.S. News & World Report)

Second of three parts. Read part one: A Personal Look at a National Problem.

Opioid addiction takes a personal toll, but it also has countrywide consequences.

On an average day in the U.S., someone begins nonmedical use of opioids every 22 seconds; someone starts using heroin every two and a half minutes; and someone dies from opioid-related overdose every 16 minutes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Fatal accidents involving both legal and illegal prescription drugs surpassed those involving alcohol in 2015, a new Governors Highway Safety Association study finds. And, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, 46.3 percent of federal inmates across the United States are serving time for drug-related offenses.

Opioid abuse has skyrocketed in the last 15 years, and the U.S. government has started to change its approach to the problem, transitioning from a "war on drugs" mentality that pegged users as criminals to efforts to treat people as victims suffering from a disease – a move that many think comes down to black vs. white.

Read the entire story.

A Personal Look at a National Problem (U.S News & World Report)

It was fun. It made them feel good. It took away the pain.

Jim, Morgan, John, and Andrea never met. From different states, age groups, and backgrounds, it was unlikely they ever would. And yet they all were tempted by the same thing: opioids.

For Jim Stallings, and 91 Americans every day, it only took one more time.

Born and raised in Maryland, Stallings, his mother recalls, was funny and compassionate, always taking the side of the underdog. He loved fishing, grilling and tinkering with anything mechanical.

But in 1981, when he was 13, Stallings began taking prescription drugs at what were then called "fruit bowling" parties. These days they are known as "Skittles Parties," where teenagers raid their family medicine cabinets, dump whatever pills they find in a bowl and take them at random.

Read the entire story.

Gutting Medicaid will harm generations to come (Opinion Baltimore Sun)

Elijah Cummings, Leana S. Wen, Kevin Lindamood

A bill to fundamentally change the way Americans purchase and receive health care passed the House of Representatives and is now waiting consideration in the Senate. The bill, which was opposed by nearly every major medical organization, threatens the health and well-being of millions of Americans with public and private insurance.

The bill would effectively gut Medicaid, the program that today, thanks to expansion under the Affordable Care Act(ACA), ensures health services for 74 million Americans, including nearly 1.3 million Marylanders. As leaders and frontline health professionals, we see daily how Medicaid saves lives and provides hope and stability, and our state must join a growing national effort to preserve it.

On Monday, we will join with leaders from the NAACP, Health Care Access Maryland, Health Care for All! and advocates around the state at a public forum to advance our work here in Maryland to save Medicaid. We start that work by making sure elected officials and fellow citizens alike know and understand the role of Medicaid in safeguarding health and life in Baltimore, Maryland and nationally.

Read entire op-ed.

Sen. Van Hollen says GOP backing off on treatment (WMAR)

Right now five dozen addicts call the Tuerk house in West Baltimore their home and on this day, U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen stops by to offer hope for the hundreds of people stuck on its waiting list.

Van Hollen and Baltimore City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen toured the facility and listened to stories of hope from its residents at a time when hope for added treatment dollars is waning in Washington.

"Just yesterday, the U.S. Attorney General, Attorney General Sessions, decided to roll back some of the progress we've made at the federal level under the Obama administration where they were telling prosecutors to deal with substance abuse with more care and not simply locking people up," said Van Hollen.

It is a point not lost upon Baltimore's health commissioner who advocates treating addiction like a disease, not like a moral decision or crime.

Read the entire story. 

Baltimore City Health Department Announces Beginning of 2017 Code Red Season

BALTIMORE, MD (May 15, 2017)—The Baltimore City Health Department today announced the start of Baltimore City’s Code Red program for the coming summer.

Code Red is a multi-agency effort to provide heat education and cooling relief to vulnerable populations in Baltimore. Throughout the summer, City agencies provide public education to residents about the effects of sustained heat on health and perform community outreach regarding energy assistance programs for senior residents and other susceptible groups through Community Action Partnership Centers.

Commissioner's Corner: Addressing health disparities across the life course

At the Baltimore City Health Department, we believe that where a person lives should

Microblading is popular but getting it done at a salon is illegal (ABC2 News)

Baltimore City health officials are warning residents to do their research before paying for cosmetic tattooing.

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