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CVS Health Announces Aetna Foundation’s $1 Million Grant to Northern Shenandoah Valley Substance Abuse Coalition to Fight Opioid Epidemic

March 08, 2019 | Health Insurance

Garth Graham, MD, president of the Aetna Foundation and vice president of community health for Aetna.
Garth Graham, MD, president of the Aetna Foundation and vice president of community health for Aetna, helps introduce LEOIP, the Law Enforcement Overdose Intervention Program, Friday, Mar.8, 2019 in Winchester, VA at the Winchester Medical Center Conference Center. (Eric Kayne/AP Images for Aetna Foundation)
Daniel Carey, MD, Virginia secretary of health and human services.
Daniel Carey, MD, Virginia secretary of health and human services, helps introduce LEOIP, the Law Enforcement Overdose Intervention Program, Friday, Mar.8, 2019 in Winchester, VA at the Winchester Medical Center Conference Center. (Eric Kayne/AP Images for Aetna Foundation)

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Grant is part of company’s ongoing commitment to building healthier communities by supporting innovative approaches that address public health challenges

WINCHESTER, Va. – In its ongoing effort to help combat the nation’s opioid epidemic across the country, CVS Health today announced the Aetna Foundation’s $1 million grant to the Northern Shenandoah Valley Substance Abuse Coalition (the Coalition), which will help fuel the Coalition’s new Law Enforcement Overdose Intervention Program. The multi-year grant was formally announced by the Aetna Foundation and Coalition officials, Virginia Secretary of Health and Human Resources Daniel Carey, M.D., Virginia Deputy Secretary of Public Safety Jae K. Davenport, and others, at an event at the Winchester Medical Center in Winchester, Virginia.

In 2017, there were more than 70,000 American deaths from opioid overdoses reported – the largest number in a single year to date, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The Virginia Department of Health declared the state’s opioid epidemic a public health emergency in 2016. In Virginia, emergency department visits for heroin overdoses from January to September 2016 increased more than 85 percent compared to the same timeframe in 2015.

CVS Health has an ongoing commitment to help address the opioid epidemic in the state and nationally. The funding the Aetna Foundation is providing will help the Coalition build a model that will allow law enforcement officials to serve as a community resource for overdose victims. Specifically, the Coalition will aim to connect non-fatal overdose victims to a support system before they are discharged from local Valley Health System hospitals. To build this support system, the Coalition will create multidisciplinary teams formed by key community stakeholders, including a law enforcement officer, case manager and counselor. The Coalition will also train a Peer Recovery Specialist, an individual in recovery who knows first-hand what it’s like to suffer from addiction, to serve on the team and support non-fatal overdose victims.

“Over the last year, we have worked with local organizations that are making strides to help combat the opioid epidemic in their communities. From state government agencies to hospital associations, grassroots organizations and now local law enforcement, one thing that has been abundantly clear is that while there is no singular playbook for combatting the opioid crisis, we have to look at every player as a valuable asset in the fight,” said Dr. Garth Graham, President of the Aetna Foundation. “We hope our efforts in Virginia will help us build a model that other states can use to equip local law enforcement to play a key role in this fight.”

“We know that we are facing a serious battle when it comes to fighting the opioid crisis that has already impacted too many families in our state,” said Lauren Cummings, executive director for the Northern Shenandoah Valley Substance Abuse Coalition “The support from CVS Health through the Aetna Foundation will help us build a model grounded in compassion that will help us save more lives in Virginia.”

By working together through this cross-sectional partnership, the Coalition plans to take an effective and compassionate approach to treatment and recovery, while also cutting down on costs to the judicial system, preventing front-line burnout of first responders and reducing law enforcement and first responder costs.

“Virginia has made progress in combatting the overdose crisis over the last several years, but we know there is more work to be done,” said Dr. Carey. “Tapping into one of our best resources, our men and women in local law enforcement, will move our efforts even closer to the frontline and will allow us to help save more lives moving forward.”

CVS Health will announce funding by the Aetna Foundation to additional states in coming months, as part the Foundation’s ongoing commitment to building healthier communities. These grants are in addition to the previously awarded $1 million grants by the Aetna Foundation that are already supporting organizations in North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Florida to address the opioid epidemic locally.

These state-based grants are an extension of a larger company-wide, multi-pronged response to the nation’s growing opioid epidemic. As part of this commitment, CVS Health has increased access to safe medication disposal, allowing patients to properly dispose of unused opioids and other medications, by installing disposal units in 32 CVS Pharmacy locations and 70 community-based law enforcement offices across Virginia. Together, these units have collected nearly 37,000 pounds of unwanted medication in the state. The company has also established a standing order to dispense the opioid overdose-reversal drug naloxone to CVS Pharmacy patients without an individual prescription in 48 states, including Virginia. And, the company’s opioid abuse prevention program, Pharmacists Teach, has reached more than 13,000 students and parents across the state. CVS Health has committed to reaching an additional 250,000 students and parents nationally through the program, bringing the total number of community participants reached to more than 655,000 by the end of this year.

Previously, both CVS Health and Aetna have focused on a comprehensive clinical strategy to support increased access to non-opioid pain treatment options, reduce inappropriate opioid prescribing and increase the use of effective, proven medications to treat opioid use disorder.

The state-based grants are part of a $100 million commitment by CVS Health and its affiliates to making community health and wellness central to the company’s charge for a better world. The new Building Healthier Communities initiative, which will be funded over five years by CVS Health and the CVS Health and Aetna Foundations, builds upon the outstanding tradition of community investment by CVS Health and Aetna and helps to advance CVS Health’s purpose of helping people on their path to better health.

About NSVSAC

The Northern Shenandoah Valley Substance Abuse Coalition collaborates with community partners to take the lead in identifying and developing effective resources to ensure that the necessary continuum of care for substance use and addiction services is available to all members of the community in the greater Winchester, Virginia area. Formed in 2014, the Coalition and its public and private sector partners have worked to compassionately reduce the stigma of addiction, improve access to substance use treatment services and decrease the number of overdoses to combat the opioid epidemic in Virginia. For more information on the Coalition, please visit www.roadtorecovery.info.

About CVS Health

CVS Health is the nation’s premier health innovation company helping people on their path to better health. Whether in one of its pharmacies or through its health services and plans, CVS Health is pioneering a bold new approach to total health by making quality care more affordable, accessible, simple and seamless. CVS Health is community-based and locally focused, engaging consumers with the care they need when and where they need it. The Company has more than 9,800 retail locations, approximately 1,100 walk-in medical clinics, a leading pharmacy benefits manager with approximately 93 million plan members, a dedicated senior pharmacy care business serving more than one million patients per year, expanding specialty pharmacy services, and a leading stand-alone Medicare Part D prescription drug plan. CVS Health also serves an estimated 39 million people through traditional, voluntary and consumer-directed health insurance products and related services, including a rapidly expanding Medicare Advantage offering. This innovative health care model increases access to quality care, delivers better health outcomes and lowers overall health care costs. Find more information about how CVS Health is shaping the future of health at www.cvshealth.com.

About the Aetna Foundation

The Aetna Foundation is an independent charitable and philanthropic affiliate of CVS Health (NYSE:CVS). As a national health foundation, the Aetna Foundation promotes wellness, health, and access to high-quality health care for everyone. This work is enhanced by the time and commitment of company employees, who volunteered 670,000 hours in 2018 alone. For more information, visit www.aetnafoundation.org