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A successful approach to addressing overdose and overdose deaths while building community recovery.

What is it about?

A rural community of some 25,000 will and determination to face the growing opioid epidemic while joining together to build measurable prevention, early intervention, treatment and recovery. Issues of addressing the community will, organizing framework of efforts, need for workforce and education of medical leaders and enhancing public awareness, public health services and public safety simultaneously are the foundations to the efforts made and outcomes reported.

Why is it important?

This effort was done more by the collective will of the community, health leaders and coordination and expansion of services (e.g. treatment, MAT, worker education at local university, medical leaders) than adding new dollars or grants. In Hancock County, Findlay became the hub for an otherwise rural county with a major drug corridor passing through it. All factors were considered. Resistance from some was an initial barrier, believing such community effort would only add to the problem or create an adverse image of the community in general. Didn't happen. The effort united the majority and strengthened the will.

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Michael Flaherty
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