Modern Healthcare October 24, 2018
Associated Press

President Donald Trump pledged on Wednesday to put an “extremely big dent” in the scourge of drug addiction in America as he signed legislation intended to help tackle the opioid crisis, the deadliest epidemic of overdoses in the country’s history.

Nearly 48,000 people died last year from overdoses involving opioids. Overall, U.S. drug overdose deaths have started to level off, but HHS Secretary Alex Azar says it’s too soon to declare victory.

The legislation will add treatment options and get the U.S. Postal Service to screen overseas packages for a synthetic form of opioids called fentanyl that are being shipped largely from China.

The measure mandates advance electronic data on all international packages, including those delivered by the Postal...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: Congress / White House, Govt Agencies, Pharma, Regulations
GOP jumps on chance to bash Biden on Medicare
Hospitals wary of Supreme Court ruling on abortion and emergency care
Will The White House’s Plan To Curb Drug Shortages Work?
Senators press Steward lenders for solutions days ahead of payment deadline
NPR’s Domencio Montanaro talks about healthcare and the 2024 election

Share This Article