Opioid Treatment
The Colorado Department of Human Services, Office of Behavioral Health (OBH) has awarded funding to 17 county jails to continue or start medication-assisted treatment (MAT) for people with opioid use disorder.
The state is awarding nearly $1.9 million in total to the 17 county sheriff’s offices that applied for MAT funding through Sept. 29, 2020. MAT combines medication with behavioral therapy and is considered being the most effective way to treat opioid use disorder. Up to this point, OBH has funded medication-assisted treatment services in five of the 17 county jails: Boulder, Denver, Douglas, Jefferson, and Pueblo. Nearly 500 people received medication-assisted treatment before or upon release from jail through this funding since 2017.
“In Colorado, we continue to increase the availability of MAT services statewide for those who need it, including treatment for people who are incarcerated, in many cases as a result of their addiction,” said Robert Werthwein, director of the Office of Behavioral Health. “We know that the risk of opioid overdose drastically increases after a period of abstinence such as incarceration and intervening at this juncture is key to our efforts to reduce overdoses.”
The 17 counties being funded and dollar amounts are:
Arapahoe $150,000
Boulder $150,000
Conejos $60,000
Denver $150,000
Douglas $150,000
Eagle $60,000
El Paso $150,000
Fremont $150,000
Garfield $100,000
Gilpin $60,000
Jefferson $60,000
La Plata $60,000
Larimer $150,000
Mesa $150,000
Moffat $60,000
Pueblo $150,000
Summit $60,000
A recent study in North Carolina found that in the first two weeks after being released from prison, former inmates were 40 times more likely to die of an opioid overdose than others. When looking at heroin-specific overdoses in the same population, the study found that formerly incarcerated individuals’ likelihood of overdose death increased to 74 times the norm within the first two weeks after release.
OBH is providing the funding through the State Opioid Response Grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, and thanks to a recently passed legislation (SB 19-008), Colorado has ensured this funding can continue even after the grant is over.
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