Health Care

Trump Promises State Of Emergency On Opioid Crisis

President Trump told reporters he's drafting an emergency declaration to deal with the national opioid overdose epidemic.

Trump Promises State Of Emergency On Opioid Crisis
The White House
SMS

President Trump is apparently ready to declare the opioid crisis a national state of emergency.

Trump said: "We're going to draw it up, and we're going to make it a national emergency. It is a serious problem, the likes of which we have never had."

Trump's move is in line with what his opioid task force recommended in its first interim report on the crisis.

The declaration could relax some federal rules and give the Trump administration and local governments more flexibility on how they combat the crisis. Some regions have been battling opioids with nontraditional programs, like needle exchanges or equipping police officers with drugs to treat opioid overdoses.

But Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price recently implied the administration wouldn't need to declare an emergency.

Sessions Creates Unit To Go After Doctors, Pharmacies Pushing Opioids
Sessions Creates Unit To Go After Doctors, Pharmacies Pushing Opioids

Sessions Creates Unit To Go After Doctors, Pharmacies Pushing Opioids

The new unit, which Sessions called a "data analytics program," will "identify and prosecute" those who are "contributing to this opioid epidemic."

LEARN MORE

Price told the press: "The resources that we need or the focus that we need to bring to bear to the opioid crisis at this point can be addressed without the declaration of an emergency. Although, all things are on the table for the president."

Trump has previously suggested he'd combat the opioid crisis by empowering law enforcement and cracking down on drug use.