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Progress on King County’s Response to the Opioid Overdose Crisis  

KUOW reported recently that while Washington overdose deaths continued to rise in 2023, there’s hope in King County’s numbers and current strategy that is increasing widespread access to treatment, medications, overdose reversal drugs, and places to go. In King County, the number of overdose fatalities by quarter fell in the final three months of 2023, and there was another decrease in the first quarter of 2024.  

In advance of the 2024 King County Substance Use Conference on June 6th, we wanted to share the collective progress our team from DCHS and Public Health—Seattle & King County has made since announcing King County’s comprehensive response to the opioid overdose crisis in March.  

The 2024 King County Substance Use Conference: A Vision for Hope is on June 6th at Highline College. Come and learn more about how treatments and medicines work, living in recovery, and how to connect to drug and/or alcohol use services throughout King County. Register today to attend virtually. We hope to see you there! kingcounty.gov/sudconference

While we build more places to go like the post-overdose recovery center, new sobering center, and 16-bed residential treatment facility, plus five crisis care centers in the years to come, we are reaching more people where they are today and creating more capacity within our behavioral health system right now.  

Every day, people are accessing treatment, in higher numbers than ever before. We are expanding and making access to treatment and medication for opioid use disorder as low barrier as possible—through walk-in and mobile clinics, free prescription lines, naloxone kits in the community, in addition to more outreach and mobile crisis teams responding in-person.”—Susan McLaughlin, Behavioral Health and Recovery Division Director 

Highlights include: 

Also of note, Next Day Appointments with a DCHS-contracted behavioral health provider are widely available for people experiencing a drug or alcohol use crisis. Providers can conduct an assessment and connect people to treatment. Anyone can call the Washington Recovery Help Line to help someone get an appointment scheduled for the next day: 1-866-789-1511 

“Being able to integrate all of these systems so people can get access to evidence-based care wherever they go, really makes me look forward to us having a fighting chance for the next couple of years.” –Brad Finegood, Strategic Advisor, Public Health Seattle & King County 

Brad Finegood, Susan McLaughlin, and Dr. Matt Goldman visited the Post-Overdose Recovery Center’s future site in downtown Seattle. The Downtown Emergency Service Center (DESC) will operate the facility set to open in 2025.

See more progress on all of King County’s 13 Actions to Stop Overdoses and Clear Paths to Recovery for All: 

  1. Launch a 24/7 Buprenorphine Prescribing Line.  
  1. Enable 40+ existing behavioral health providers to begin providing Buprenorphine induction and ongoing treatment through Medicaid funding.  
  1. Increase the capacity of 24/7 youth mobile crisis teams in the field from 3 to 5, and 24/7 adult mobile crisis teams from 17 to 27 teams countywide.  
  1. Invest in 6 new community navigators for public safety, health care, and community settings, to link people at risk of overdose to treatment and support harm reduction.  
  1. Open a 16-bed residential treatment program with Pioneer Human Services for people with co-occurring disorders (mental health and substance use) in Seattle.  
  1. Partner with the City of Seattle to site and re-open a 24/7 sobering center that provides an essential health-supervised care setting.  
  1. Partner with the City of Seattle, Downtown Emergency Service Center (DESC) and University of Washington to open a post-overdose recovery center.  
  1. Expand the number of King County fire departments that leave-behind naloxone at sites of overdoses where people are at high risk.  
  1. Convene a county-wide Overdose Fatality Review process to review overdose fatalities and develop recommendations for policy changes to reduce overdose deaths.  
  1. Test up to 1,000 drug samples annually, to reduce accidental drug poisonings, through expanding drug checking services in King County-based services.  
  1.  Distribute 45,000 naloxone kits and 100,000 test strips, a 15 percent increase from 2023, through a new centralized harm reduction supply center and vending machines.  
  1. Add ~100 new apprenticeships statewide with half of the opportunities in King County. Apprenticeships range from behavioral health technicians, substance use disorder professionals, and peer counselors.  
  1. Distribute $2 million in overdose prevention grants from opioid settlement funds to disproportionately impacted underserved populations. Populations with high overdose rates include Black, Indigenous and communities of color, and people living unsheltered.  
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