Rauner signs executive order
creating task force to fight opioid crisis
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[September 07, 2017]
CHICAGO
Governor Bruce Rauner Wednesday signed Executive Order 17-05,
creating the governor’s Opioid Overdose Prevention and Intervention
Task Force.
The task force will be co-chaired by Lt. Gov. Evelyn Sanguinetti and
Dr. Nirav D. Shah, director of the Illinois Department of Public
Health. The task force will look at strategies to prevent expansion
of the opioid crisis, treat and promote the recovery of individuals
with opioid-use disorder, and reduce the number of opioid overdose
deaths.
“The opioid crisis in Illinois affects people from all walks of life
─ small towns and big cities, the wealthy and the poor, young and
old. Without treatment, people suffering from opioid-use disorder
risk dropping out of school, losing their job, becoming homeless,
losing custody of their children, or getting arrested,” Gov. Rauner
said. “This is not a problem that government, health care, police,
schools, communities or others can solve on their own. We must all
work together. Today, I am creating and charging the Opioid Overdose
Prevention and Intervention Task Force to develop a comprehensive
strategy to stem the tide of the opioid crisis in Illinois.”
Since 2013, the number of heroin overdose deaths in Illinois has
doubled, and the number of opioid overdose deaths has quadrupled.
More than 1,900 people in Illinois are expected to die of opioid
overdoses this year ─ more than one-and-a-half times the number of
homicides and almost twice the number of fatal motor vehicle
crashes. Between 2013 and 2016 in Illinois, total drug overdose
deaths increased by almost 50 percent, overdose deaths involving
opioids increased 76 percent, and overdose deaths involving
synthetic opioids (such as fentanyl) increased 258 percent.
“The opioid epidemic knows no neighborhood, no color, and no class.
It is not confined to alleys in urban settings, nor isolated in
rural communities,” Lt. Gov. Sanguinetti said. “Illinois needs a
comprehensive opioid strategy that destigmatizes addiction and
appropriately aligns resources across state agencies in partnership
with community priorities.”
“The opioid crisis in Illinois is not something that we can arrest
or even treat our way out of,” IDPH Director Shah said. “Active
collaboration and engagement with state agencies, elected officials,
the medical community, providers, insurers, educators, law
enforcement, patient advocacy organizations, and the public will be
critical to our success.”
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The Task Force will look at how to increase the number of
providers that use the Illinois Prescription Monitoring Program; reduce
high-risk opioid prescribing; make information and resources more accessible to
the public; strengthen data collection, analysis, and sharing; reduce the number
of overdose deaths of individuals recently released from an institutional
facility; and increase naloxone availability and training.
“It is time we understand and treat substance-use disorder as a
chronic disease and eliminate the stigma that prevents individuals struggling
with opioid use from seeking care,” Illinois Department of Human Services
Secretary James Dimas said. “This epidemic impacts every community, every
neighborhood, and, as a result, every home. With evidence from years of
scientific research to support us, Illinois is ready to shatter the image of
substance use disorder as a ‘moral failing’ and treat it as any other chronic
illness.”
“As a family doctor at Lawndale Christian Health Center on the west side of
Chicago, I am privileged and blessed to be on a team that tries to respond to
the needs of our community. One of the greatest needs we see right now is
preventing deaths from opioid overdose,” Dr. Thomas D. Huggett said. “Medication
assisted treatment, behavioral health counseling, and social support are vitally
needed as we walk beside our patients who want to leave opioid-use disorder and
heroin behind. We have already seen many success stories of those who are now
feeling much better, working a job, and are reunited with their families, but
there is much work left to do.”
Members of the Task Force will include officials from the Office of the
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois, Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board,
Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority, Illinois State Police, and from
Illinois Departments of: Financial and Professional Regulation, Human Services,
Public Health, Juvenile Justice, Insurance, Corrections, and Healthcare and
Family Services.
[Office of the Governor Bruce Rauner]
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