Integration of Services

El Centro Family Health

El Centro Family Health’s Semillas de Esperanza y Salud – Rural Opioid Implementation Initiative is to support a comprehensive multi-sector implementation initiative to reduce opioid dependence and drug overdose deaths in northeastern New Mexico.

Delta Health Alliance, Inc.

The Delta Opioid Taskforce (DOT) Initiative’s purpose is to reduce the morbidity and mortality of substance use disorder (SUD), including opioid use disorder (OUD), in rural communities of the Mississippi Delta.

County of Chautauqua

The strategic plan for this project seeks to address current gaps in services/access to care within Chautauqua County as identified through the consortium’ s assessment process, including:
• the need for even wider distribution of naloxone to prevent even more opioid overdose deaths;

Community Care of West Virginia, Inc.

This project is addressing treatment prevention and long term recovery in North Central West Virginia. Specifically, the counties of Lewis, Braxton, Upshur and Southern Harrison.

Coastlands Ministries

Through the Rural Communities Opioid Response Program-Planning (RCORP-Planning) initiative, Project Lazarus enhanced partnerships with members from the AIDS Leadership Foothills-Area Alliance (ALFA), Acadia Healthcare- Mountain Health Solutions Wilkesboro Comprehensive Treatment Center (MHS),

Care South Carolina, Inc.

To reduce morbidity, mortality and harm associated with opioid misuse and overdose in our communities by increasing immediate access to prevention, treatment and sustained recovery 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