Recent News

Cardin hosts opioid roundtable (Kent County News)

Mar 23rd, 2018

Two years ago, U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md., helped organize a roundtable discussion regarding the growing opioid epidemic in Maryland and throughout the United States, bringing health care professionals, law enforcement and nonprofit organizations together to share ideas on what has and has not worked in putting a dent in the crisis. In Baltimore City, Health Department Senior Advisor Dr. Shelly Choo said more than 35,000 residents had been naloxone trained, saving 1,500 lives. Choo said the city is using a three-pillar approach to combating the epidemic. 

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opioids

Bmore Healthy Newsletter: March 23, 2018

Mar 23rd, 2018

Click here to read the 3/23/18 issue of the newsletter.  Subscribe to the Bmore Healthy newsletter.

In this issue:

  • Note from the Commissioner
  • Dr. Wen Responds to President Trump’s Initiative to Stop Opioid Abuse
  • Dr. Wen Speaks at Brown Memorial Park Avenue Presbyterian Church
  • BCHD Launches New Virtual Supermarket Site
  • and more

Public Health Heroes Spotlight: Chronic Disease Prevention Team’s Community Asthma Program

Mar 23rd, 2018

The Health Department’s Chronic Disease Prevention team operates the Community Asthma Program (CAP), an intervention strategy aimed at reducing the number of children and youth in Baltimore between the ages of 2 and 18 who have trouble controlling their asthma. Through CAP, community health workers offer asthma education and visit the homes of young asthma patients.

Asthma

Dr. Leana Wen, Baltimore City Health Commissioner (Baltimore Fishbowl)

Mar 22nd, 2018

Years before Dr. Leana Wen was appointed to head the Baltimore City Health Department, she was leading teams of doctors in emergency rooms as the attending physician, coordinating care for patients in some of the most critical moments of their lives.

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Leana Wen

Why the federal Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program’s fate is uncertain (PBS)

Mar 22nd, 2018

In July, the Department of Health and Human Services mailed notices to 81 schools, public health departments and community centers that received funding through the program with an update: The grants were being cancelled, and the program, which has had an annual cost of $101 million in recent years, would be shuttered in a matter of months.

“It made no sense,” said Dr. Leana Wen, commissioner for Baltimore City Health Department. “Congress appropriated the funding that was available.”

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Leana Wenteen pregnancy prevention

Congress’s omnibus bill adds $3.3 billion to fight the opioid crisis. It’s not enough. (Vox)

Mar 22nd, 2018

Congress’s new spending deal commits more money to combat an opioid epidemic that’s led to hundreds of thousands of drug overdose deaths since the late 1990s. But while experts and advocates welcome the funding, there are a few reasons for caution.

To deal with this, Dr. Leana Wen, the health commissioner of Baltimore, has suggested “a Ryan White for the opioid epidemic” — a reference to the program, launched in the 1990s, that created a health care safety net for people with HIV and communities hit hardest by the disease. The idea is to create a source of funds that officials on the ground know they would be able to rely on for years to come.

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Congress is hyping up its opioid bills. But there’s not much to hype. (Vox)

Mar 21st, 2018

If you hear members of Congress tell it, this is really the moment that federal lawmakers are taking the opioid epidemic seriously. “Many of these policies seem to be tinkering around the edges,” Dr. Leana Wen, the health commissioner of Baltimore, told me. 

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Supervised injection sites aimed at cutting opioid overdoses risk wrath of DEA, prosecutors (McClatchy)

Mar 21st, 2018

A handful of cities could soon face a legal showdown with the Trump administration over their efforts to open “supervised injection facilities” where drug addicts can shoot up with powerful illegal drugs while trained personnel stand by to prevent fatal overdoses.

“We cannot take an action that would jeopardize our federal funding,” Wen’s statement said. “We require guidance from the Department of Justice about the legality of these sites.”

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Leana Wenopioids

Trump's death penalty plan for drug dealers a 'step backwards,' experts say (CNN)

Mar 20th, 2018

President Donald Trump on Monday rolled out his three-part plan to tackle the opioid epidemic -- including some programs long championed by public health advocates -- but it's the proposal to impose the death penalty on drug traffickers that has raised the most eyebrows.

Dr. Leana Wen, Baltimore City Health Commissioner, said "The war on drugs has not worked," she said. "The last thing we need is to further criminalize the disease of addiction. We need for everyone to understand addiction is a disease, that treatment exists and recovery is possible."

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Leana Wenopioids

Baltimore health commissioner: Trump's opioid announcement yesterday was deeply troubling (The Hill)

Mar 20th, 2018

In her op-ed, Dr. Wen expresses her concern's with President Trump's opioid plan.

"Yesterday, President Trump announced his plan to curb the opioid epidemic. While it is laudable that he is devoting time and attention to this issue, much of his announcement is deeply troubling."

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Leana Wenopioids

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