$2.1M to go for addiction services
CareFirst to give grants
to 11 community health groups in Md., Va., D.C.
CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield announced plans Tuesday to award about $2.1 million in grants to 11 community health organizations in Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia — a move that health care and government officials hope will boost addiction treatment efforts.
CareFirst officials, along with Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh and U.S. Rep. Elijah Cummings, announced the grants at a news conference Wednesday, emphasizing the urgent need to address the soaring number of drug- and alcohol-related deaths in Maryland. In 2017, the state reported an all-time high of 2,282 deaths stemming from drugs and alcohol.
The 11 grants:
The Anne Arundel Medical Center Foundation was granted $150,000 to expand outpatient services and train the county’s emergency department providers to administer Suboxone — a medication that suppresses drug cravings and withdrawal — to patients.
The Arlington County Community Service Board was granted $250,000 to add primary care staff, peer recovery coaches and other services in Northern Virginia.
The Association for the Public Defender of Maryland was granted $382,000 to provide outpatient screening, treatment, referrals, case management and peer support to justice-involved individuals in Frederick and Washington counties.
The Behavioral Health Leadership Institute was granted $198,674 to offer medication-assisted treatment for opioid-addicted individuals leaving the Baltimore detention center.
Catholic Charities of Baltimore was granted $150,000 to expand capacity for integrated treatment for co-occurring substance use disorders in Baltimore City and Baltimore County;
Family and Medical Counseling Service was granted $200,000 to expand access to screening, intervention, referrals, peer support and Narcan kits to patients in Washington.
The Harford County Office of Drug Control Policy was granted $111,000 to enhance triage and care coordination for individuals seeking access to treatment services.
Health Care for the Homeless was granted $100,000 to improve screening, intervention, referral to treatment services and Narcan kits at its Baltimore facilities.
Tuerk House was granted $133,789 to increase access to an intensive outpatient program that provides group therapy services, case management, medication-assisted treatment and referral support.
The University of Maryland, Baltimore Foundation was granted $212,172 to bolster substance use disorder telemedicine capability for residents of Maryland’s Eastern Shore.
The Western Maryland Health System Foundation was granted $200,000 to establish a community-based crisis center that will provide outpatient screening, assessment, intervention and referral services.
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