Fourth Annual Save A Life Day Projected To Surpass Records

More states than ever before will distribute opioid reversal medication for Save A Life Day on Sept 26.

Save A Life Day began in 2020 as a pilot project in Kanawha and Putnam counties. 

By 2021, the project expanded to 17 counties, and then all 55 West Virginia counties participated in 2022.

Last year, all 13 Appalachian states participated, hosting more than 300 events and distributing more than 45,000 naloxone doses in a single day.

Four years after the project’s two-county start, 2024’s Save-A-Life Day events will be held in every state east of the Mississippi River, and a few beyond.

To find an event near you, visit soarwv.org/east

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

National Drug Czar Says Overdose Decreases Positive, But More To Do

Early Center for Disease Control (CDC) data shows a dramatic fall of 12 percent in overdose death rates across the U.S. in the last year. During the same period, West Virginia’s drug overdose rate fell almost 11 percent, nearly keeping pace with the nation.

To gain insight into this encouraging development, Appalachia Health News Reporter, Emily Rice, spoke with West Virginia’s own Dr. Rahul Gupta, the nation’s director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDPC). Here is that conversation.

The transcript below has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Rice: At the end of your statement, you say the decline in overdose deaths is both a beacon of hope and an urgent call to action. The advocates that I’ve spoken with here on the ground in West Virginia also see it as a call to action but are hesitant to celebrate these numbers because they are provisional and because they say one overdose death is still too many. So in speaking about the drug epidemic, how should we interpret this provisional data from the CDC?

Gupta: I think we should look at this in the same way we have always looked at this type of data. When President Biden and Vice President Harris took office in January of 2021 this similar type of data showed that drug overdose deaths were increasing at 31 percent year over year, 31 percent. And this is the reason that from day one, President Biden and Vice President Harris made it a top priority, and made historic public health and public safety efforts over those last four years to reduce our drug overdose deaths across the country. So now you look at this data, and we can see the latest version of data showing that 10 percent reduction in overdose deaths. This is, again, in the reverse direction of what we were seeing with this similar type of data of a 31 percent year-over-year increase. Now, having said that these aren’t just numbers. These are lives, and we didn’t get from the number of drug overdoses increasing by more than 30 percent year after year, to decreasing by accident. It has not been an accident. It is because President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris made this issue a top priority on day one, and set out to transform the way our nation approaches this epidemic through a whole of society response. So over the past year, the Biden/Harris administration has taken more historic action and made more unprecedented investments that I want to talk about than ever before, ever before in the history of this country to address this crisis head-on. 

You know, if you see the President’s 2022 strategy, it was very clearly outlined that if we have a clear strategy on policy, and we invest in those, we will see this type of progress. So this is why the president really looked at this and the vice president as how to best address two key drivers: One is untreated addiction. The other is the trafficking profits. On the untreated addiction side, under the leadership of President Biden and Vice President Harris, now we have removed decades-long barriers to treatment for substance use disorder. We’ve invested more than 40 percent more than the previous administration in funding for treatment in communities all across the country, especially in West Virginia. And we’ve expanded access to life-saving overdose medications, overdose medications like Naloxone, which is not only available over the counter but at the lowest price cost it has ever been in history. Now on the public safety side, we’ve seized more fentanyl at the port of entry in the last two years than in the past five years combined. We’ve also added more drug detection machines at the border to stop the flow of fentanyl, and sentenced hundreds of targets involved in drug trafficking, from the illicit Chinese chemical companies to drug cartels to their lawyers and enablers. And then we finally also work to strengthen the international efforts to disrupt the entire global illicit drug trade. So this progress that we’re seeing is important to take this milestone. But also remember, we have so much more work ahead, but at this point in time and history, we seem to understand what policies do work and why they have to be invested in. And this is exactly why the President and the Vice President are not going to stop. They have American’s backs, and they will continue to fight, both in Congress and with anyone that does not believe in the unity agenda, as Biden would say that this is not a red state or blue state issue. This is America’s issue, and we need to make sure that we are addressing this as a country together.

Rice: What do you think has been the most effective measure in decreasing overdose deaths that the Biden-Harris administration has implemented since January 2021? While I know it will take time more data and research to determine which substance use disorder initiatives were most effective, do you think some of those can be attributed to the ready availability of Narcan and Naloxone approved by the FDA, over the counter, etc?

Gupta: Well, certainly, I think there’s been a number of aspects, both on the public health and public safety side, that includes approving, as you mentioned, the overdose medications for over the counter purchase and making sure that they are affordable. So an historic investment in getting those life saving medications to the community no matter where you are. For instance, the State Opioid Response (SOR) and Tribal Opioid Response (TOR) programs have delivered nearly 10 million kits, 10 million kits of these overdose reversal medications to communities. We’ve convened the U.S. drug manufacturers who have FDA approval of overdose reversal medication through different ways and how they access and have the affordability to save more lives. We’ve also, in addition to expanding treatment access, we now have 15 times more providers across the country than we did before in the prior administration. We have also made sure that there is telehealth available for methadone in the long term, and the barriers to methadone is lifted. 

When you look at the prevention, the early intervention, and harm reduction approach that’s been the first time in the history of the United States that it has been federally, not only policy, but also been funded, then you look at treatment expansion in historic ways, and finally, the recovery we have been working to develop a recovery ready nation, through recovery ready businesses, all of these combined with historic seizures of fentanyl at the border and destroy the border having are separate but combined and integrated action that has worked, just as a strategy has mentioned, addressing those two key drivers of untreated addiction, as well as the drug trafficking process.

Rice: Speaking to your home state, one of the hardest, if not the hardest, hit by the opioid epidemic, what are some steps that can be taken by West Virginians working in prevention and treatment of substance use disorder to ensure overdose rates continue to fall?

Gupta: Well, thank you for asking that. I was just back home a couple of months ago, and we met with the One Box initiative….this goes back to the holistic approach. I mean, when they reminded me that when I was a commissioner, we had funded $120,000 for this program and now we’re seeing the graduates of this program, the work of the program, and have peer recovery support specialists become available. It is this type of work. And then we saw 13 new commitments to the White House challenge to save lives from overdoses from colleges and universities working across West Virginia. Then we also had meetings with local officials and representatives from the students and other bodies, as well as including police, schools, community and health and partnerships. So you know, it’s heartwarming for me to see that we are making progress in my home state, but at the same time, it is really important to understand those we have lost and learned from them, as well as leave no stone unturned to make sure that we’re saving the next life that we can save. So it’s important to put all tools in the toolbox in order to, you know, save every life possible that we can through these evidence based, data driven policies that have now demonstrated, there’s clear demonstration that you know what the agenda that Vice President Harris and President Biden set out to do is having a positive impacts for the state, but we have so much more work to do.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Remembering James Earl Jones, Plus New Overdose Data, This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, renowned actor James Earl Jones died earlier this month at age 93. He was part of the cast of the 1987 John Sayles film “Matewan,” which was shot in Thurmond, West Virginia.

Curtis Tate spoke to David Wohl, who once asked Jones to speak to his students at an acting class at West Virginia State University.

Plus, early data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show a dramatic fall of 12 percent in overdose death rates across the United States in the last year. West Virginia’s drug overdose rate fell almost 11 percent during that time.

To gain insight into this encouraging development, Appalachia Health News Reporter Emily Rice spoke with West Virginia’s own Dr. Rahul Gupta, who directs the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University and Marshall University School of Journalism and Mass Communications.

Maria Young produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Free At-Home COVID-19 Tests Coming Again Soon

By the end of the month, U.S. households will again be able to order free at-home COVID-19 tests from the federal government.

While the agency that oversees the testing has not announced an exact date for ordering to begin, the website, COVIDtests.gov, says tests can be ordered “at the end of September 2024.”

Each household will be eligible for four free COVID-19 tests. The tests will be able to detect current COVID-19 variants and can be used through the end of the year.

Operated by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the program has distributed more than 900 million tests since it began.

At-home tests are available for sale around the U.S. and retail for an average of $11, according to one 2023 nationwide study by the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker.

The federal Public Health Emergency (PHE) for COVID-19 expired on May 11, 2023. During the PHE, the federal government required private health plans to cover COVID-19 tests ordered or administered by a clinician at no out-of-pocket charge to the patient. Private insurers were also required to reimburse for up to eight at-home rapid tests per member, per month.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Officials Recommend Vaccination To Stay Healthy During ‘Respiratory Season’

As temperatures cool and respiratory illnesses become more prevalent, state health officials are urging the public to get the latest versions of their vaccines.

Autumn, or as the West Virginia Department of Health (DH) calls it, “respiratory season,” is rife with coughs, sniffles and chills as kids go back to school during changing seasons.

That’s why the DH is urging residents to remain vigilant against flu, COVID-19 and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) by receiving the latest dose of the vaccine for each illness. 

DH Secretary, Dr. Sherri Young said in a press release that vaccination is one of the most effective tools in reducing severe illness and hospitalization from respiratory viruses.

“While the risk of severe outcomes from COVID-19 has decreased due to widespread vaccination and previous exposure, new variants continue to pose a threat, especially to those who are unvaccinated, elderly, or have underlying health conditions,” Young said.

On August 22 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved an updated COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use authorization (EUA).

The updated mRNA vaccine formula targets currently circulating variants and provides better protection against serious consequences of COVID-19, including hospitalization and death, according to the FDA.

According to the DH, there are three RSV vaccines available for adults 60 years and older to help prevent serious infection and hospitalization among those at increased risk.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends a single dose of any FDA-licensed RSV vaccine for all adults ages 75 and older and adults ages 60 to 74 at increased risk of severe RSV.

In July 2023, the FDA approved Beyfortus, an RSV immunization designed to protect infants under eight months old from contracting RSV. West Virginia University experts were instrumental in the approval process of Beyfortus.

There is also an RSV vaccine available for those who are pregnant. In a press release, the DH advised pregnant people should get a single dose of the maternal RSV vaccine, Abrysvo, during the 32nd to 36th week of pregnancy.

According to the CDC, all flu vaccines for the 2024 to 2025 season are formulated to protect against three different flu viruses.

In addition to vaccination, to prevent respiratory infection, the CDC recommends practicing good respiratory hygiene by regular hand washing with soap and water or alcohol-based hand sanitizer, staying home and away from others while sick and cleaning and disinfecting commonly touched surfaces.

State Health Officer, Dr. Matthew Christiansen said West Virginia is fortunate to have an array of resources available to protect against respiratory illness.

“With the latest vaccines for COVID-19 and RSV now at our disposal, coupled with proven hygiene practices, we are in a strong position to combat these illnesses,” Christiansen said. “I strongly urge every West Virginian to seize this opportunity to get vaccinated and adhere to good hygiene habits. By doing so, we can significantly reduce the risk of serious illness and protect our families and communities.”

**Editor’s Note: This story was updated to clarify that Beyfortus is not a vaccine, as previously stated, but a monoclonal antibody, which works differently than a vaccine.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

Early Data Shows Dramatic Fall In Overdose Death Rates; Advocates Advise Caution

A Sept. 1 analysis of provisional overdose death rate data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows a rapid decrease in the number of drug overdose deaths in the U.S. and this time West Virginia appears to be keeping pace.

However, advocates working on the ground directly with communities affected by the substance use disorder (SUD) crisis, say to be cautious of preliminary data and that there’s more work to be done and policy changes to be enacted.

“If you were to compare these numbers to pre-COVID, they’re still very massively up,” said Sarah Stone, co-director of the Charleston non-profit group, Solutions Oriented Addiction Response (SOAR). “So it feels to me like we’re still very much in the thick of everything.”

Stone also noted that this data is provisional, meaning, these are not finalized figures for the year.

West Virginia’s drug overdose rate fell nearly 11 percent from April 2023 to April 2024, according to provisional CDC data. The same report showed the nation’s drug overdose death rate fell by a reported 12.2 percent during the same period.

A screenshot of the CDC’s Provisional Drug Overdose Death Counts. Accessed on Sept. 18, 2024.

While falling overdose death rates are good news, advocates like Stone say even one drug overdose death is too many.

“Every one of the numbers from the data that we’re looking at is someone’s kid, is someone’s mom, is someone’s somebody, somebody celebrated when that number was born,” Stone said. “Until that number is zero, which is a goal, I can’t celebrate it.”

Stone said SOAR considers every drug overdose death a policy failure and that community recovery advocates feel like they are working against the state of West Virginia to make drug overdose death rates fall.

“If numbers are going down, we want to feel good about that, right? And it’s easy to feel good about that if you don’t make the connection that the number as a person and the number as a policy fail,” Stone said.

Stone is referencing policy decisions that have challenged the goals of those who work in West Virginia harm reduction in recent years. 

According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), harm reduction refers to an evidence-based approach to treating SUD with a set of practical strategies and ideas aimed at reducing negative consequences associated with drug use.

“People want to show up to keep themselves more safe, and we should be able to provide that for them, but because of restrictive laws, we cannot,” Stone said.

In 2021, the Legislature passed Senate Bill 334, which requires licensing for syringe distribution, programs offering syringe exchanges to host many other harm reduction services, made programs deny clean needles to those who did not return with their used needles and only allowed them to serve clients with state IDs.

“I do celebrate the wins,” Stone said. “I know how hard we’re working, but it’d be cool if lawmakers would make things more accessible to folks.”

SOAR hosts four naloxone boxes across the city of Charleston and holds monthly mutual aid fairs to distribute the supplies they legally can to help people suffering from SUD stay safe.

On Sept. 26, SOAR will participate in the largest day of naloxone distribution to date. Save-A-Life Day began in 2020 with a two-county pilot project in Kanawha and Putnam counties. By 2021, the project expanded to 17 counties, then all 55 counties participated in 2022.

Last year, all 13 Appalachian states participated, hosting more than 300 events and distributing more than 45,000 naloxone doses in a single day.

Just four years after the project’s two-county start, 2024’s Save-A-Life Day events will be held in every state east of the Mississippi River, and a few beyond.

“We’ve heard of same-day saves,” Stone said. “So that, of course, is impactful, getting naloxone out, but it’s also making people think, ‘How can we make this more available in our community? How can we like, go deeper? How can we get it to people who we don’t even see on Save a Life Day? So it’s energizing to folks, and it is a day to celebrate.”

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting with support from Marshall Health.

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