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Recovery agenda must start before addiction takes hold.
Summary
HHS announced a $100 million 'Streets' initiative and $794 million in block grant allocations to support community mental health and substance use services.
Content
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced a set of federal actions aimed at preventing substance use disorders and supporting recovery before addiction takes hold. The department described a new initiative called Safety Through Recovery, Engagement, and Evidence-based Treatment and Supports, or "Streets," intended to guide people from crisis to stability. HHS also outlined allocations of block grants and targeted funding for community-based treatment and court-ordered outpatient services. The announcements were presented as part of a broader recovery agenda by the department.
Key actions announced:
- A new "Streets" initiative with $100 million to be invested across eight regions to support pathways from crisis to recovery.
- $794 million in block grant allocations, reported as $319 million for community mental health services and $475 million for substance use prevention, treatment, and recovery programs.
- $10 million for community-based, court-ordered outpatient treatment for adults and permission for states to use federal funds for FDA-approved medication-assisted treatment in certain child-protection cases.
- A planned communication to providers welcoming participation by faith-based organizations in recovery programs.
Summary:
These announcements increase federal funding and program options aimed at prevention, treatment, and community-based recovery support. Undetermined at this time.
