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How Did Indiana's Overdose Rate Drop 12% Last Year?

Indiana providers decreased opioid prescriptions by 35 percent over the past five years according to the American Medical Association Opioid Task Force 2019 Progress Report.
Indiana providers decreased opioid prescriptions by 35 percent over the past five years according to the American Medical Association Opioid Task Force 2019 Progress Report.

The head of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy visited Indiana this week to talk with state leaders about the opioid crisis. Drug Czar Jim Carroll says that he wants to share with other states and the federal government what led to a recent drop in overdose deaths in Indiana. 

Indiana saw a 12 percent decline in drug overdose deaths in the last year, according to preliminary CDC data. That’s almost three times the national decline of 4.2 percent. 

“I came to learn was the way that you were training local doctors and local providers in some of the rural communities,” Carroll says. “How to be addiction doctors, how to help patients who have an addiction, instead of farming it out to another doctor, that might be an hour or two away.”

And Carroll says state leaders told him they want to strengthen their relationship with the federal government. 

“That's one of the things we've done today is build that relationship,"  Carroll says. "So that we can call it a shoulder so we can have easy dialogue, to make sure that we're working together to help people."

Despite the drop in overdose deaths, some say access to substance abuse treatment in parts of Indiana – including rural areas –  is still a challenge

To improve access to doctors, Gov. Eric Holcomb and Carroll discussed the increasing broadband access in rural areas of the state. 

“To make sure that people in rural communities have the ability to get immediate access to the internet,” Carroll says. “They can find treatment options in their community, they can get prevention programs, they can get the latest information.”

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Telehealth programs are  growing in Indiana. Especially in rural areas, where treatment options can be hours away. 

“People these days are not uncomfortable with the idea of picking up their phone, and you know, using an application so they can see each other while they're talking," Carroll says. 

Carroll says he spoke with Holcomb about the ways he can support these programs. 

Sara Wittmeyer is the News Bureau Chief for WFIU and WTIU. Sara has more than two decades of journalism experience. She led the creation of the converged WFIU/WTIU Newsroom in 2010 and previously served with KBIA at the University of Missouri, WNKU at Northern Kentucky University in Highland Heights, KY, and at WCPO News in Cincinnati.