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New Actions to Stop the Surge of Fentanyl Overdoses and Expand Behavioral Health Treatment in King County

On Monday morning, King County Executive Dow Constantine announced a multi-part strategy across five priority areas to address the surge of fentanyl and stop the record overdose deaths in the region. The strategies expand behavioral health treatment, increase access to medications for opioid use disorder, and make overdose prevention tools and resources more widely available.

The rapid rise of synthetic drugs like Fentanyl that now dominate the drug supply has accelerated and worsened people’s substance use disorders, leading to tragic overdoses. The majority (82%) of overdose deaths in 2023 involved fentanyl, illustrating how dangerous and unprecedented the new landscape is across the region. (Public Health — Seattle & King County Overdose Dashboards.)

In 2023, King County served more than 30,000 people through MIDD, provided nearly 1,800 people with substance use disorder (SUD) residential treatment, added 22 walk-in buprenorphine sites and a mobile methadone van, helped more than 13,000 people receive Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD), distributed 45,000 naloxone kits and over 100,000 fentanyl test strips, and trained hundreds of people on overdose prevention methods. King County’s Emergency Services Patrol responded to more than 22,000 calls and connected more than 6,500 people to shelter and the sobering center.

King County is taking action in 2024 to prevent overdoses, save lives, and clear paths to recovery for all.

The Department of Community and Human Services (DCHS) and Public Health Seattle & King County are working in partnership to implement the following strategies:

Priority 1: Treatment and community-based, recovery-focused care for all

Priority 2: Behavioral health beds and facilities

Priority 3: Overdose reversal and fentanyl testing.

Priority 4: A robust, diverse behavioral health workforce.

Priority 5: Reduced disproportionality in overdoses.

A recent report, requested by Councilmember Reagan Dunn, commissioned by DCHS, and created by Comagine reviewed service capacity gaps and needs of people with substance use disorders in the region. The report helped inform the five priority areas.

“Fentanyl is a poison that kills three people every day in King County. This is an unprecedented crisis that touches all kinds of people from all walks of life. It will take a collaborative, whole-of-government approach to reverse this surge in overdose deaths and protect future generations from the dangers of fentanyl,” said Councilmember Reagan Dunn. “I thank Executive Constantine for his ongoing partnership on providing more treatment and lifesaving interventions for those who need it. Recovery is always possible, and by working together we can help even more people find that recovery.”

“During the pandemic we led with science, with medical expertise and with facts, and because of that we had some of the best outcomes in the nation despite being the first area hit. We can do it again with this shadow pandemic of substance use disorder and behavioral health crisis. People are hurting and we see it every day on our streets. We know treatment works, and by prioritizing access to treatment, King County is leading with science, expertise, and compassion. The plan outlined today does all of that and will produce tangible results which is why I’m proud to be partnering with the Executive and my fellow councilmembers today,” said Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda. 

These priority actions are funded by existing resources, including MIDD Behavioral Health Sales Tax, Medicaid, commercial insurance, state and federal funds, and the Crisis Care Centers levy upon approval of its implementation plan.

To read more about King County’s response, including information about treatment access and how to support someone with SUD, substance use prevention: key steps to reduce harm and prevent use, or how King County is integrating health care systems to support and care for people with SUDs, check out our other blogs on the DCHS Cultivating Connections blog.

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