Integration of Services

Armstrong-Indiana-Clarion Drug and Alcohol Commission, Inc.

The overall goal of the project is to reduce the morbidity and mortality of substance use disorder (SUD), including opioid use disorders (OUD) associated with opioid overdoses in high-risk rural communities by strengthening the capacity of multi-sector consortiums to address one or more of three

Appalachian Mountain Community Health Centers

The Western North Carolina (WNC) Opioid Response Consortium was formed in response to The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) identification of Cherokee, Clay, and Graham as three of the top 200 counties in the United States at high risk of outbreak for HIV and Hepatitis C Virus (HCV

Amistades, Inc.

The Pinal County Latino Opioid Consortium (PCLOC) is at a high state of readiness to implement Si Se Puede as an opportunity to build comprehensive prevention, treatment and recovery infrastructure supporting the rural community of Coolidge, Arizona. The PCLOC members – Amistades, Inc.

Adena Health System

Ross CORP will focus existing collaborative efforts for broader and deeper impact in a county that ranks in the top 75th risk percentile for overdose indicators.

Positively Living

Positively Living/Choice Health Network’s Tennessee‒Central Appalachian Opioid Response (T-CAOR) consortium aims to reduce rates of HIV, hepatitis C, and overdose and increase testing and treatment for people living in Tennessee’s Campbell, Cocke, Jefferson, and Scott Counties.

Health Care Coalition of Lafayette County

HCC will work to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with substance use disorder and opioid overdoes in our high-risk rural community. HCC will develop a sustainable network with regional collaboration and data interoperability.

Amistades, Inc.

The southern Arizona nonprofit community development organization Amistades, Inc., joins a core team of regional community health partners—Cochise County Health and Social Services, Chiricahua Community Health Center, Southeastern Arizona Behavioral Health Services, and Pinal Hispanic Counsel—to

University of Tennessee

The East Tennessee Appalachian region is noted for its vulnerability to opioid use disorder (OUD); its rural communities are particularly vulnerable, as emphasized by extreme rates of NAS and opioid overdose, and lack of treatment and recovery providers and services.

University of Cincinnati

Our approach for this implementation project is based on the comprehensive community analysis and strategic planning completed during the RCORP-Planning phase. Each consortium member brings individual strengths and resources that complement the other members.

St. Luke's Miners Memorial Hospital

The goal of the project and consortium team is to reduce the morbidity and mortality of Substance Use Disorder (SUD), including Opioid Use Disorder (OUD), in our high-risk, rural community through our consortium and community partners by implementing prevention, treatment, and recovery service