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			 “Heroin and other opioid drug use is at crisis levels in Illinois. 
			Substance use is ripping apart families and severely impacting our 
			communities,” said IDHS Secretary James Dimas. “The $8 million in 
			grants will enhance our efforts for individuals dependent on heroin 
			and other opioids. We continue to work diligently to secure 
			additional federal funding that will help support community-based 
			prevention and treatment efforts. IDHS is committed to working with 
			schools, community-based organizations and the recovery community, 
			to reduce the stigma associated with substance use disorders and 
			ensure access to treatment.” 
			
			 
			The Medication-Assisted Treatment Prescription Opioid Addiction 
			grant was awarded by the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment to the 
			IDHS Division of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse. This three year, $3 
			million grant will support an expansion of outpatient methadone 
			treatment services and will reduce the waiting lists for heroin and 
			other opioid dependent individuals seeking these services in 
			Illinois. This grant will also support medication assisted treatment 
			for offenders released from Sheridan Correctional Center who are at 
			high risk for returning to heroin use (and high risk for overdose) 
			upon release.
 IDHS’ Division of Family and Community Services received the 
			Prescription Drug Opioid Overdose Prevention Grant from the Center 
			for Substance Abuse Prevention. This five year, $5 million grant is 
			expected to reduce the number of overdose deaths in the following 
			six high need counties: Cook, Lake, DuPage, Will, St. Clair, and 
			Madison. A key component to this program will be the purchase and 
			distribution of Naloxone kits to first responders. Naloxone is the 
			opioid overdose reversal drug that is critical to saving lives so 
			people can get the treatment they need.
 
			
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“Illinois, like the rest of the country, is in the midst of a drug overdose 
epidemic and we must act now,” said Illinois Department of Public Health 
Director Nirav D. Shah, M.D., J.D. “According to the CDC, prescribing and sales 
of opioids have quadrupled since 1999 and more than three out of five drug 
overdose deaths involve an opioid. This epidemic is devastating families and 
communities. To stop this trend of opioid overdose, we must provide support and 
treatment to those suffering from opioid use disorders. And to save lives, we 
must provide first responders with the resources needed for an individual who 
has overdosed. It will take all of us, substance abuse and mental health 
providers, law enforcement, public health, first responders, communities, and 
others, to put an end to this epidemic.”  
				 
			[Marianne Manko, Director of 
			Communications, IDHS] 
			
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