Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 1 | Page 12

PUBLIC HEALTH COMING TOGETHER FOR HOPE, HEALING AND RECOVERY - Louisville’s Plan to Address Substance Use and Misuse Sarah Moyer, MD, MPH T he current opioid epidemic has been called the worst drug crisis in American history. In 2016, an average of 115 people died each day in the United States from a drug overdose. In Louisville, drug overdose deaths have increased each year since 2011, and the age-adjusted overdose death rate in 2016 was more than double what it was in 2011. And while the use of drugs garners significant media attention and community concern, tobacco and alcohol use remain far more pervasive throughout Louisville and affect many more people. tors, and evaluating the effectiveness of those interventions. Many stakeholders working together across many sectors can improve the health of our community. While the challenges of substance use disorder may seem daunt- ing, they can be met and overcome with a public health approach. It is an approach that has worked for other issues, including childhood infectious diseases, lead poisoning, and motor vehicle accidents, leading to a significant increase in life expectancy in the United States over the past 120 years. From their insights, expertise and recommendations comes this comprehensive report and two-year action plan. This plan is designed to better coordinate ongoing efforts, add new efforts to fill in the gaps, and engage new partners and resources to tackle the issue of substance use disorder. The report makes 10 specific evidence-based recommendations to be implemented over the next two years. It proposes new initiatives and advocates for expanding and strengthening programs already in place that are proving to A public health approach involves studying root causes, iden- tifying risk factors, designing interventions to address these fac- 10 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE Coming Together for Hope, Healing and Recovery is Louisville’s two-year action plan to accelerate the city’s fight against substance use disorder. Work on the plan began in July 2017 when the De- partment of Public Health and Wellness convened a wide-ranging group that included people in recovery, leaders of nonprofits, law enforcement, health care institutions, social work experts, school officials, concerned parents and scholars. Over the following months, work groups studied the problem and examined initiatives already in place in Louisville and in other cities.