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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Tuesday, Apr 26 2016

Full Issue

In Effort To Curb Opioid Overdose Pandemic, One Boston Clinic Takes Unconventional Approach

On Tuesday, Boston Health Care for the Homeless will open a room where drug users can ride out their highs under medical supervision. “When you initially hear we’re going to cooperate with someone using heroin, it might be a little shock to the system,” said former state senator Steven Tolman. "But with the level of pandemic we’re dealing with ... any effort to get this problem under control is a worthwhile experiment.”

Alarm over the rocketing fatality rate, and the need to better manage staffing disruptions from all those overdoses, has led Boston Health Care for the Homeless to adopt an unorthodox and controversial plan: On Tuesday, it will open a room where drug users can ride out their highs under medical supervision, with the aim of preventing deaths. (Pfeiffer, 4/26)

See KHN's past coverage of the clinic's plan: 

And in other news —

Chinese laboratories are producing and openly selling a new form of deadly fentanyl to get around China’s recent export ban on the synthetic drug causing thousands of overdose deaths across the United States. The slightly tweaked version of fentanyl — called furanyl fentanyl — is so new that it is not on the US government’s list of controlled substances. That means the altered fentanyl, which was blamed for the March overdose of an Illinois man, is technically legal for drug dealers to sell. (Armstrong, 4/26)

After a floor debate laced with stories of the toll drug addiction has taken across Connecticut, the House on Monday unanimously passed what legislators described as a comprehensive measure aimed at curbing the epidemic of opioid and heroin abuse. (Levin Becker, 4/25)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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