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

King County’s Five Priorities to Stop the Surge of Overdose Deaths were first announced in March 2024 as a coordinated cross-government response to slow the opioid overdose crisis.  Over the past two years, we’ve seen a promising overall decline in overdoses in King County; fatal overdoses decreased 32% from 2023 to 2025. Nonetheless, fatal overdoses in 2025 remain elevated compared to before 2022. Working in partnership, the Department of Community and Human Services (DCHS) and Public Health Seattle & King County are investing in 13 actions to increase widespread access to treatment, medications, overdose reversal drugs, and places to go. 

Appointments for routine care are available, more teams are in the field conducting outreach and responding to help people who call 988, and King County has opened more safe places for people to go for treatment. The ORCA CenterKing County’s first Crisis Care Center, a new residential treatment facility in Skyway all opened in the past 18 months. There are also 24 walk-in clinics to get Medication for Opioid Use, plus mobile health clinics and a prescription line for Buprenorphine. 

The new Overdose Recovery and Care Access (ORCA) Center, served nearly 300 patients in September—December 2025—its first four months. 

Here’s key progress we saw in 2025: 

King County offers a full continuum of programs and services for people with substance use disorder (SUD). We want everyone to know that getting treatment for drug or alcohol use in 2026 is now easier than ever. Here’s a snapshot of services: 

Early intervention saves lives and connects more people to services:  

Vending machine users reported using naloxone they got
from a vending machine to respond to over 800 overdoses to date. 

The right treatment is available the moment you need it.  

New Treatment Facilities: Take a look at new treatment facilities that are now open.  

Recovery programs help keep people thriving in recovery, including: 

Treatment works, we see people recover every day. We remain committed to continuing to expand treatment in the coming years, including adding four more Crisis Care Centers, including one for youth, as well as more local residential treatment beds for longer term care. 

ICYMI: A Year Later: Update on King County’s Five-Priority Strategy to Prevent Overdoses & Expand Treatment     

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