PORTLAND, Ore. -- Trabajadores de la salud con experiencia así como las personas a las que ellos sirven pueden brindar una atención única a las comunidades.
En Oregon, las organizaciones que emplean a estos trabajadores están recibiendo subsidios, con el objetivo de cerrar las disparidades de salud en las comunidades afectadas por la discriminación.
El Servicio para niños y familias de Parrott Creek fue fundado en 1968 como un centro de tratamiento residencial para jóvenes en el sistema de justicia juvenil.
El director de esta organización sin fines de lucro, Simon Fulford, dice que el subsidio ayudará a Parrott Creek a desarrollar su programa tradicional de trabajadores de la salud que ayudan a las madres a mantenerse sobrias.
"Nuestro personal y los miembros de la comunidad que han vivido esa experiencia, han pasado por desafios en sus vidas," dijo Fulford, agrega que "han encontrado el camino para acceder a apoyos de atencion medica o apoyos de servicios sociales y pueden compartir su aprendizaje y guiar a otros para que obtengan los servicios y apoyos adecuados."
CareOregon está invirtiendo 455 mil dólares en ocho grupos, incluido el Centro Asiático de Servicios y Salud, la Organización Comunitaria de Migrantes y Refugiados y el Centro para Jóvenes y Familias Nativo Americanos. Los grupos brindan atención culturalmente específica a sus clientes.
Fulford dice que a menudo es difícil para las personas combatir una adicción a las drogas si no se cumplen sus preocupaciones principales, como tener un techo sobre la cabeza o lo suficiente para comer.
"Si podemos ayudar a reducir algunas otras barreras, tambien esto ayudara, a su vez, a reducir las de la atencion medica y brindar un acceso mas equitativo a la atencion medica", dijo Fulford.
Fulford también señala que el camino hacia la recuperación puede ser largo, con muchos altibajos. A menudo, el viaje no es lineal. Pero dice que el sistema de salud en general se está dando cuenta de la interconexión de las necesidades de las personas, como la vivienda y la seguridad alimentaria, y que hay muchos factores para estar saludables.
Divulgación: CareOregon contribuye a nuestro fondo para informar sobre problemas de salud, problemas de personas mayores. Si desea ayudar a respaldar noticias de interés público,
haga clic aquí.
get more stories like this via email
While overdose deaths in the Commonwealth have declined, deaths among Black Kentuckians have increased by 5%, according to data from the latest Kentucky Overdose Fatality Report.
Organizations across the state are working to stem overdose deaths among residents of color. In Bowling Green, the nonprofit HOTEL INC. is focused on harm reduction.
Rebecca Troxell, HOTEL INC. lead navigator, explains the group's street teams go into homeless encampments and provide Narcan, fentanyl strips, hygiene packets and medical care.
"We have volunteer doctors, EMTs and nurses who go out with us, so we're able to provide medical care on site. We're able to provide educational components with that, as well, helping people understand what harm reduction really is," she said.
She added a recent SHIFT grant from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky will allow the street teams to reach more people. The program, which awards funding up to $50,000, aims to reduce disparities and other inequities worsened by the drug crisis.
In Lexington, the nonprofit agricultural organization Black Soil KY is adding Narcan boxes and educational materials to its farmers markets. They are also working to improve access to fresh food among Kentuckians in recovery.
Ashley Smith, co-founder and CEO of Black Soil, said farmers will also receive harm-reduction training: "We know having that unbarriered access to local goods, like seasonal produce, local meat within your recovery housing, just really provides an advantage for the overall outcome."
Kayla Migneron, director of the Louisville-based maternal health program Granny's Birth Initiative, said the SHIFT grant funding will help expand stigma-reduction training for doulas.
"Our main goal is that any person would be comfortable coming to get assistance from us, whether it's accessing resources using our stuff, even just asking for connections to other programming," explained Migneron.
Nationwide, overdose deaths among mostly younger Black women nearly tripled between 2015 and 2021.
get more stories like this via email
In Robeson County, the opioid crisis is exposing the need for increased addiction support. The Southeastern Prevention and Addiction Recovery Resource Center is tackling the issue by bringing together more than 70 organizations into a unified recovery network.
Jackie Davis, SPARC director, says its goal is to streamline services and improve access to comprehensive support.
"Robeson County has a high rate of usage, and so one of the main challenges has been services and then organizations and agencies working in silos," Davis said.
She added that before SPARC, local agencies were isolated in their efforts. Now with funding and support in part from the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trusts, she said community-based initiative is fostering cooperation to better serve the people of Robeson County, with plans to secure ongoing funding and improve access to care.
Davis said SPARC provides critical resources such as training, educational support and help securing opioid settlement funds. She said these efforts have improved patient care and developed long-term recovery strategies tailored to the community's needs.
"Health disparities here, we just want to reduce or even eliminate if we can, because we know that there are major differences from rural areas to urban areas or larger cities, and we just want better for our community," she said.
She noted that future goals include addressing transportation barriers to ensure access to services and ensuring sustainability through continued funding and support for member organizations.
get more stories like this via email
By Adam Pinsker for WISH-TV.
Broadcast version by Joe Ulery for Indiana News Service reporting for the WISH-TV-Free Press Indiana-Public News Service Collaboration
THC retailers across Indiana are being warned they could be violating Indiana law by selling cannabis products containing more than 0.3% of the chemical Delta-9, which can have an intoxicating effect and may cause some side effects.
Although no Indiana law regulates Delta-9, the Indiana Attorney General's Office issued an opinion in 2023 defining Delta-8 and Delta-10 as Schedule I drugs.
Vigo County Prosecutor Terry Modesitt says violators could be charged with a high-level felony.
"I personally felt the fair way to deal with this was to send a letter to all the businesses and advise them of the attorney general's ruling, and to give them some time to get these products off their shelves," the prosecutor based in Terre Haute said.
Modesitt estimates from 30 to 40 retailers in the county along I-70 on the Illinois border - many of them gas station convenience stores - are in violation.
"We've actually had our drug task force, since I've sent this letter, going around checking businesses," he said.
Modesitt said until state lawmakers pass legislation clearly defining how much cannabis can be sold in Indiana, he'll have to enforce the laws based on the attorney general's opinion.
Indiana State Police investigators secretly bought THC products and found some of them were mislabeled. In other cases, they found Delta-9 products had more than the 0.3% of THC allowable under a federal law passed in 2018.
State officials and CBD retailers have also expressed concerns that some THC products may have chemicals added to them.
Scott Hughes, co-owner of WildEye Lounge dab bar in Indianapolis, said he and his business partner, Nick Brown, test all of their cannabis products. "To show there is no heavy metals, to show there is no pesticides in the product, which we do regularly with all of our products before we release them."
Hughes urges customers to do their homework before purchasing any CBD product.
"You're not going to go to your mechanic to ask why your knee hurts. You're not going to go to your doctor to ask what is wrong with your car," Hughes said.
Adam Pinsker wrote this article for WISH-TV.
get more stories like this via email