Integration of Services

San Antonio Council On Alcohol And Drug Abuse

The Kendall and Kerr Counties’ Opioid Response (KOR) Consortium through the Rural Communities Opioid Response Program-Implementation (RCORP-I) grant will implement a five-point strategy of services to reduce morbidity and mortality associated with substance misuse, substance use disorder (SUD) in

Rural Health Network of Oklahoma, Inc.

This Oklahoma Rural and Tribal Consortium project is a partnership among healthcare, behavioral health and technical service providers established to combat the SUD/OUD blight on our communities.

Randolph County Caring Community, Inc.

BRIDGES - Building Resources Impacting Determinants Gaining Essential Services, BRIDGES is a proactive response to data-driven and informed, demonstrated community need for a coordinated, integrative, continuum of support service and resources for justice involved individuals and other target pop

Oklahoma State University

The Okmulgee Opioid Response Project (OOPRS) exists to reduce the morbidity and mortality of SUD and OUD in Okmulgee County, Oklahoma, a high-risk, rural community.

NYE Communities Coalition

The “Formidable Fourteen”, the rural frontier Nevada counties that make up much of the landmass of Nevada, have formed a consortium to address opioid use disorder and substance use disorder (OUD/SUD).This project binds the rural counties and their OUD/SUD efforts together within counties, regions

Migrant Health Center Western Region, Inc.

The Puerto Rico Rural Communities Opioid Response Program-Implementation Consortium (PR-RCORP) seek overarching goals relate to the reduction of morbidity and mortality among SUD/OUD populations residing in rural locations, prioritizing populations who have historically suffered from poorer healt

Mariposa Community Health Center, Inc.

Santa Cruz County Overcoming Substance Addiction (SOSA) consists of 23 partners that represent seven sectors: primary and inpatient/emergency health care, behavioral health, law enforcement, emergency medical response, the legal system (courts and detention), education and youth development, and

Kittitas County Health Network

Between 2018 and 2020, Kittitas County saw 8.5 opioid related deaths per 100,000, 2.5 deaths per 100,000 higher than the United States average. In 2021, the number of opioid related deaths per 100,000 in Kittitas County rose to 17.1 when factoring in 8 fentanyl related deaths alone.