Lily's Place the Inspiration for Federal NAS Act

Congressman Evan Jenkins was in Huntington Tuesday at Lily’s Place – an infant recovery center that inspired a federal bill helping others to create facilities like it.

The Nurturing and Supporting Healthy Babies Act is part of a larger set of bills known as the Comprehensive Addiction Recovery Act, or CARA, and it addresses the national opioid crisis. . Both the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate passed the bill a few weeks ago. In just the last few days – CARA was signed by President Barack Obama.

The NAS Healthy Babies Act will help to create facilities like Lily’s Place in Huntington, which helps care for babies born addicted to drugs and alcohol. Jenkins says the Act does several things – the first is have the federal government examine the number of babies being born with an addiction.

“Number two, look at the appropriate models of care,” Jenkins said. “These babies need special handling, they need special medication management and they need an environment that helps them get through this weaning process with as little trauma as possible.”

And third, Jenkins says the Nurturing and Supporting Healthy Babies Act will take the experiences those in Huntington have dealt with and bring it on the national level, so facilities like Lily’s Place can more easily be created all over the country. 

President Obama Offers Federal Assistance, Condolences to West Virginia

President Barack Obama is extending his condolences and those of the nation to Governor Earl Ray Tomblin for the lives lost because of flooding.

In a statement, White House spokesman Eric Schultz says Obama spoke by phone to Governor Tomblin on Saturday while returning to Washington, D.C., from Seattle.

Schultz says Obama is committed to ensuring that Tomblin has the federal resources he needs for all recovery efforts.

Obama to Announce $1.7 Million for Drug Abuse Treatment in West Virginia

Governor Earl Ray Tomblin and Senator Joe Manchin join President Obama at the National Rx Drug Abuse and Heroin Summit in Atlanta, Georgia Tuesday. According to a press release, Obama will announce Administrative actions to further the fight against the drug epidemic.

The Administrative actions include expanding access to treatment by releasing $94 million to 271 Community Health Centers to increase substance use disorder treatment services. West Virginia community health centers in Huntington, Weirton, Dawes, Scott Depot and Rock Cave will receive a total of $1.7 million in funding.

Additionally, the Department of Agriculture is expanding its $1.4 million Rural Health and Safety Education Grant Program to include a focus on substance use disorders in rural communities.

Featured speakers at the summit will include Andrea Darr, of West Virginias Center for Children Justice and Chad Napier, Education Coordinator for Appalachia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area in West Virginia and Virginia. Darr and Napier will be presenting on the Handle With Care Program, a West Virginia pilot program designed to~provide schools with a “heads up” when a child has been identified at the scene of a traumatic event.

Finally, as part of a private sector initiative, more than 60 medical schools nationwide, including all three from West Virginia, are announcing that beginning in fall 2016, they will require students to take some form of prescriber education on opioid prescription in order to graduate. 

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Huntington Lawyer for President?

Huntington Lawyer Paul Farrell recently decided to get on the ballot for president in the state. What might have begun as a joke for Farrell is no longer a laughing matter.

Paul Farrell Jr. is a medical malpractice lawyer in Huntington. He’s never been involved in politics before and never thought he would be. But he said he worries more and more about the state he’s from and calls home, West Virginia. On Sunday mornings Farrell along with his two brothers have breakfast at his father’s house. 

‘We play around with the New York Times crossword and we talk and we were talking about politics and it was my mother who said she could bring herself to vote for Hillary, she’s probably as accurate of the West Virginia sentiment as anyone I’ve known and when she said she couldn’t vote for Hillary, my brother Sean said hey why don’t you run,” Farrell said.

Why He’s Running

Farrell said he has no dreams of being elected and he has no desire to be on the ballot in other states. He said in the last primary election the Democrats in the state opted for the “none-of-the-above” choice, which happened to be Keith Judd, a convicted felon currently serving a 17 ½ year sentence in Texas federal prison. Judd won 41 percent of the vote. Farrell says at least if they vote the other option, this time it’ll be him. 

“It started out as a joke and I know a lot of people may think I’m doing it as a joke for the notoriety or the publicity, but when people vote I don’t think they’ll necessarily be voting for Paul Farrell Jr., but I think they’ll vote for the idea of what Paul Farrell Jr. represents and that is the right of dissent,” Farrell said. 

Platform

Farrell believes many West Virginians will vote to dissent. He has two brothers that work in the coal industry and his father is Cabell Circuity Judge Paul T. Farrell Sr.  Farrell said not enough politicians on the national level care about the coal industry. 

My brother Sean said 'Hey why don't you run?' – Paul Farrell Jr.

He pointed out that the national convention not only decides the nominee, it decides the democratic platform. He said that’s what he hopes to effect with delegates the winner of the nomination in the state takes to the national convention in Philadelphia in July. 

“So by sending delegates from West Virginia even if the ultimate choice is Hillary or Bernie at least we can have some input that our platform must include some type of economic investment in our infrastructure for us to be able to survive and live in West Virginia and raise our families,” Farrell said. 

Federal Priorities vs. State Priorities 

Farrell doesn’t think priorities have been straight in Washington for a while. He said coal is over-regulated and complains there’s no contingency plan for economically gutted regions in the state. 

“We waged war on Iraq, we destroyed its economy and then we spent billions rebuilding its infrastructure. So what my point is if we’re going to be rebuilding anything, we should be rebuilding power plants and investing in clean technology in West Virginia,” Farrell said.  

Farrell says even if he does receive the most votes for the democratic nominee for president from the state, he won’t be getting into politics in the city or state. 

W.Va. Mom to Sit with First Lady at State of the Union

A West Virginia woman whose son is fighting a drug abuse problem will sit with First Lady Michelle Obama during the State of the Union address.

Cary Dixon also spoke at an event that President Barack Obama held in Charleston in October on addiction.

Her son is participating in a substance abuse treatment program in state prison while he serves a sentence for drug-related crimes. He will become eligible for parole in September.

Dixon tells the Charleston Gazette-Mail that she’s honored and humbled to be invited as a guest of the Obamas for Tuesday’s speech.

She says she’s grateful that the substance abuse problem has entered the national spotlight and that the country needs to understand that people struggling with addiction are “not bad people, they are sick people.”

President Obama Announces New Federal Drug Policies During Charleston Visit

The nation’s substance abuse epidemic is taking center stage after President Obama announced new federal policies to combat the issue Wednesday. The president announced those changes during a trip to Charleston.

Obama held a forum at the Roosevelt Community Center on the city’s East End that included a panel of both federal and local leaders.

“I didn’t grow up with a desire to use drugs. I didn’t even know what they were until I heard kids in high school talking about them, but when I heard my friend broke his toe and wasn’t taking his prescription, curiosity took over,” Jordan Coughlen told the crowd gathered at the forum.

Credit Ashton Marra
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Coughlen described himself as an addict in long term recovery. After years of struggling with an addiction to opioids, Coughlen accidentally overdosed and spent five days in a coma.

“The only reason I am here today is because treatment is effective and recovery does happen,” he said.

Now, Coughlen works at a recovery center in Wheeling helping others in his community that struggle with the disease to overcome it. After introducing the president Wednesday, Obama thanked Coughlen for sharing his story and called him living proof that treatment does work.

The President’s trip to the state coincided with an announcement of changes in federal substance abuse treatment policies, policies designed to get a hold on an epidemic that’s quickly spreading across the nation.

“More Americans now die every year from drug overdoses than they do from motor vehicle crashes. More than they do from car crashes,” he said. “The majority of those overdoses involve legal prescription drugs.”

Since 1999, sales of prescription painkillers in the country have increased by 300 percent. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says in 2012, there were enough painkillers sold to give every American adult their own bottle of pills, and the increase in sales has corresponded with increased numbers of overdose deaths.

That’s why President Obama says he’s working on the issue now, hoping to shed some light on the substance abuse epidemic.

It’s no coincidence the President chose to announce his policy changes in West Virginia, the state with the highest overdose rate in the nation. Thirty-four of every 100,000 West Virginians die from overdoses each year, nearly three times the national average.

The Obama administration’s new policies are aimed at reducing those numbers and helping addicts gain access to the treatment they need to overcome the disease.

Credit Ashton Marra / WV Public Broadcasting
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WV Public Broadcasting

The first policy deals with prescriber training- teaching medical professionals how to appropriately deal with a patient’s pain while still providing them with the treatment they need.  

“I talk to many physicians who talk about the fact that they receive little to no training on safe and effective opioid prescribing,” Director of National Drug Control Policy Michael Botticelli said on a conference call with reporters Wednesday morning, “and so what we want to make sure is that physicians and other prescribers feel comfortable not only prescribing these, but in essence not prescribing them or monitoring people along the way.”

Aside from funneling resources into proper training, the President is also working to expand access to medication assisted treatment options. Those are programs that use methadone, suboxone and newly approved vivitrol combined with counseling to wean an addict off of a drug.

West Virginia has seen limited success using these types of treatments through the state’s drug court programs, but the President wants to put funds toward training more prescribers to use the method.

Obama has also directed the Department of Health and Human Services to locate barriers in the nation’s healthcare system that would prevent expanded access and come up with actionable plans to start breaking down those barriers.

The policies are meant to bring about a change, Obama said, a change not just in the number of people abusing drugs, but also in the culture of treating addiction.

“When people loosely throw around words like junkie, nobody wants to be labeled in that way,” he said, “and part of our goal here today is to replace those words with words like father or daughter or son or friend cause then you understand there’s a human element behind this.

“This could happen to any of us, in any of our families. We can’t fight this epidemic without eliminating stigma.”

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