Showing posts with label addiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label addiction. Show all posts

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Addiction Recovery Care says it’s cooperating with FBI investigation into possible fraud

Addiction Recovery Care, Kentucky’s largest provider of
drug and alcohol treatment, has offices and other facilities
 in Louisa. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Matthew Mueller)
By Deborah Yetter
Kentucky Lantern

Kentucky’s largest provider of addiction treatment services, Addiction Recovery Care, or ARC, is the subject of an FBI investigation into possible health care fraud, according to a July 30 post on a website of the federal agency’s Louisville office.

ARC, which is funded almost entirely through Kentucky’s Medicaid program, has not been charged with any crime but the agency is asking people with information to fill out an online form “if you believe you were victimized by ARC or have information relevant to this investigation.”

ARC, a for-profit company based in Louisa, and whose CEO and affiliates have emerged as prolific political donors in recent years, said in a statement from spokesman Kyle Collier that it is cooperating with the FBI.

“We have recently learned that there is a federal investigation into ARC,” the statement said. “As we all know, healthcare is one of the most highly regulated fields in the country, and addiction treatment is among the most highly scrutinized healthcare services. ARC is a trailblazer in the field of addiction services. We are confident in our program and in the services we offer. We, and our legal counsel, are cooperating fully in the investigation.”

Collier directed further inquiries to ARC’s chief legal officer, Jessica Burke, who provided a similar statement.

ARC has developed a reputation for aggressive expansion since it was launched by Tim Robinson, a Lawrence County lawyer who founded the company with a single halfway house for alcohol treatment in 2010. Fueled by the availability of new Medicaid funds for substance use disorder treatment since 2014 under the Affordable Care Act, ARC operates some 1,800 treatment beds in 24 counties and reaches hundreds more clients through outpatient services, the Kentucky Lantern reported in July.

Last year, ARC took in $130 million in Medicaid funds, the government health plan which gets most of its money from the federal government, making it by far the state’s largest provider of substance use services.

Robinson and his wife, Lelia, own ARC and some related entities which provide them with an annual income of $533,400, according to a 2022 tax filing of a related non-profit company, Odyssey Inc.

The company has been singled out for praise by politicians including Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, who spoke at an ARC ribbon cutting for a new ARC facility in March.

“With the help of organizations like ARC, we are working to build a safer, healthier commonwealth for our people,” Beshear said.

He also praised Robinson, ARC’s founder, in his State of the Commonwealth speech in January.

“With us today,” Beshear said, “is Tim Robinson, founder and CEO of ARC, an essential partner in our fight against addiction. … I’m proud to say we now have more treatment beds per capita than any other state in the country.”

From mid-2021 through the end of 2023 Robinson, his corporations and employees gave at least $252,500 to political committees supporting Beshear, according to reporter Tom Loftus’ analysis in the Kentucky Lantern of campaign finance records.

The donations to Democrat Beshear were a shift in the giving pattern for Robinson, a lifelong and loyal Republican. He also gave big to Beshear’s opponent in the 2019 governor’s race, Republican incumbent Gov. Matt Bevin.

The Lantern’s analysis shows that — including money contributed to Beshear committees — Robinson, his corporations and employees have made at least $570,000 in political contributions over the past decade as his for-profit company grew.

He also has donated to Kentucky Republican lawmakers, including some who wrote recent letters on ARC’s behalf, asking that rate cuts proposed to ARC and other addiction providers be suspended until further study.

The rate cuts of 15% to 20% proposed by three of the six private insurance companies that process state Medicaid claims became public recently at a legislative hearing. ARC and another provider told lawmakers that such cuts would devastate Kentucky’s efforts to turn the tide of addiction to drugs and alcohol.

“Kentucky has made significant strides in access to treatment,” Matt Brown, chief administrative officer for ARC, told a July 30 legislative committee. “With these cuts, it could completely set back addiction treatment in our state 20 years.”

Six national insurance companies known as managed care organizations, or MCOs, handle the majority of the state’s $16 billion a year Medicaid business. Under contracts with the state, they are paid a fixed rate per member to cover the cost of care.

Brown, the ARC official, told lawmakers this is no time to cut payments for addiction services, citing some indicators of success.

Brown noted that overdose deaths in Kentucky have declined for the past two years after years of rising. Kentucky also has the most treatment beds per resident, most of them through ARC, he said.

The state’s latest annual overdose report, released in June, shows a decrease in deaths to 1,984 from 2,200 the year before, a decline of 9.8%.

In a statement released after the hearing on the cuts, the Kentucky Association of Health Plans, which represents the MCOs, said its members “are proud to work collaboratively with quality, trustworthy providers of behavioral health and substance use disorder treatment” and access to those services is “top of mind” to ensure those in need receive care.

“Health plans strive for the best networks possible and are encouraged by the state to prioritize plan member outcomes and value-based care,” it said.

The FBI posting on the website seeking information on ARC does not provide further information about the nature of the investigation,

A spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A questionnaire people are asked to fill out includes several questions including whether they have been or are a patient at ARC and if so, what services were received. It also asks whether the person responding has ever made a complaint before about ARC and if so, to whom.

Thursday, July 18, 2024

Program for mothers and pregnant women with substance-use disorder gets grant to help more Black women get its services

Freedom House (Photo provided to Kentucky Lantern)
By Sarah Ladd

The Volunteers of America chapter that includes Kentucky will spend $123,000 over the next nine months to figure out how to get more Black women into treatment for substance-use disorder.

Volunteers of America Mid-States received the money from the Kentucky Association of Health Plans, the trade group for health insurers in the state, to fund a new initiative called Access Justice.

With the grant money, scholar, writer and activist Brandy Kelly Pryor will evaluate VOA’s Freedom House, which is a program for “pregnant and parenting women” who have substance-use disorders. Her report is due in April.

The 31-year-old program, with locations in Louisville and Manchester, also lets minor children (under the age of 18) stay with their mothers during treatment. Kelly Pryor will primarily study Louisville and may branch out elsewhere at later.

Jennifer Hancock, president and CEO of Volunteers of America Mid-States, said this move is in direct response to the high rates of maternal mortality among Black women and the disproportionately high overdose rates among Black Kentuckians.

Kentucky overdose deaths decreased in 2023 for the second year in a row, according to the state's Drug Overdose Fatality Report.

In 2022, 2,135 Kentuckians died from an overdose, marking the first decline since 2018. Ninety percent of those deaths were from opioids and/or fentanyl.

In 2023, the number of fatal overdoses was down to 1,984. Fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid, was involbved in 1,570 of those — about 79% of the 2023 deaths. The 35-44 age group was most at risk, the report shows. Methamphetamine was involved in 55% of 2023’s overdose deaths.

Despite the overall decrease in the state, the number of Black Kentuckians who died from a drug overdose increased from 259 in 2022 to 264 in 2023.

A 2023 state report on maternal mortality also showed substance-use disorder contributed to nearly 60% of all maternal deaths. Most maternal deaths in Kentucky, 88%, are preventable, says the report from the state Cabinet for Health and Family Services.

Black partcipants at Freedom House's Kentucky locations are less likely to complete its program than those of other races, Hancock said.

“I think some of it is about the stigma that they face coming into treatment,” Hancock said. “I think that there could be some cultural and familial pressures that they experience disproportionately.”

Kelly Pryor’s study is expected to provide answers as to why Black Kentuckians leave the Freedom House program without completing it, she said.

“Women, generally speaking, have to be convinced that they deserve treatments and that they are worthy of getting this help and support versus trying to do it on their own,” Hancock said.

In her analysis, Kelly Pryor will “identify gaps in care and opportunities for improvement, ensuring that substance-use-disorder recovery services are equitable and accessible for everyone who needs them,” VOA said. The nonprofit will then come up with plans to fill any gaps in care and access.

Hancock doesn’t know if the solution will be “an internal-to-VOA process that needs to be improved, or if it’s more of a public campaign that we need to wage to reassure Black women that they’re worthy of treatment, that treatment is a place where they can feel supported and feel seen and heard.”

The measure of success, Hancock said, will be when VOA and Freedom House start seeing “better engagement rates of Black women” and higher program completion rates.

Kelly Pryor said in a prepared statement, “Building on principles of healing justice, we will ensure a process that facilitates those most affected, leading us toward the best solutions for recovery and prevention. This effort will take time and involve critical self-reflection, yet the return will have an indelible impact on Kentucky and beyond.”

Friday, July 12, 2024

Lee Co. harm-reduction chief says 80% of clients are homeless

Jo Ann Fraley runs the harm-reduction program for
the Kentucky River District Health Department.
(Photos by Stu Johnson, WEKU)
By Stu Johnson, WEKU

Homelessness is a reality in virtually every section of Kentucky. Although often thought of as an urban challenge, rural Kentucky also finds the plight of the unhoused a pressing issue. Here's a glimpse of how one Appalachian community is addressing homelessness needs.

There is a gathering spot inside The Hub in downtown Beattyville. It’s the Lee County Health Department's harm-reduction center, where staff work to connect clients with care providers.

The director is Jo Ann Fraley, a social worker who’s worked in addiction and recovery. Fraley said about 80 percent of The Hub's clients live on the streets or are couch surfing, and many don’t realize their health status.

“Lot of them have blood-pressure issues and they don’t even know. A lot of them have diabetes and they don’t even know,” Fraley said. “So, those issues we need to address as quick as we can.”

Fraley said the focus is getting people hooked up with doctors and health providers, because “We can’t expect change if we don’t help with the changing process.”

“They’ve lost hope. They give up. They’ve burnt every bridge that they have with family. And so, they let themselves go and they just think nobody cares about them. And whenever someone goes somewhere and they’re not treated very nice, they don’t go back,” said Fraley.

Another staff member at The Hub is Shawn Maynard, who was a user of oxycontin, pain pills, and then methamphetamine, along with alcohol. Maynard has been clean for six years and works with clients to address barriers. He said the homeless lifestyle itself creates health risks.

“When you’re homeless, your hygiene’s not gonna be good and that’s gonna create infection, staph infection,” said Maynard. “If you do get a cut and you’re not getting the proper wound care for it, it’s gonna get infected.”

Nathan Tipton
Nathan Tipton, a client of The Hub, said he’s been four months clean after struggling with drugs for years.

“I was on meth and drinking real bad and after my papa and mama died, it got worse and stayed out there in the woods for about four and half year; still homeless, but life makes a big difference when you got God on your side,” said Tipton.

Tipton said it’s different from before, he was stealing and robbing to get a fix.

The Lee County Health Department is part of the Kentucky River Health District. District Health Director Scott Lockard said he and Fraley brainstormed over The Hub concept, and said creating bonding relationships is important.

“We form that relationship. We show them that they can be treated with dignity. We establish trust and then when the timing is right and they’re ready for treatment, we can link them to treatment immediately,” said Lockard.

“Health is the foundation for everything. If you don’t have health, you can’t worry about education, you can’t worry about employment. You can’t worry about everything else.”

So, Lockard said that means linking up to a medical home and making sure the clients have a payer source, which for most is Medicaid. He said some don’t even realize they are eligible for the fedreal-state program that provides free medical care to lower-income people.

Lockard said the district is trying to to establish a similar program in Letcher County, and he envisions similar like services in all seven Kentucky River District counties, ideally in the next five years or so. Besides Lee and Letcher, the district also includes Knott, Perry, Leslie, Owsley and Wolfe counties.

Thursday, July 11, 2024

Breathitt, Lee, Jessamine and Nelson counties are certified as Recovery Ready Communities, totaling 14 in effort's 14 months

Kentucky Health News map
Gov. Andy Beshear presents Recovery Ready Community
certificate for Lee County to Scott Lockard and Jo Ann Fraley
of the Kentucky River District Health Department. (Photo by Al Cross) 
By Al Cross
Kentucky Health News

Four more Kentucky counties have been certified as Recovery Ready Communities, signaling that they have the services needed to help their residents recover from addiction. That brings the total to 14 out of 120; the program began 14 monhs ago. "We've got 106 to go," Gov. Andy Beshear said.

Breathitt, Jessamine, Lee and Nelson counties earned cetification by showing they are able to provide addiction treatment to their 123,000 residents, according to Beshear, who presented Lee County's certificate at a wide-ranging press conference Thursday.

Scott Lockard, public-health director for the seven-county Kentucky River Disrrict Health Department, accepted Lee County's certificate with Jo Ann Fraley, who runs the department's harm-reduction program, which includes a syringe exchange to prevent disease among intravenous drug users and steer them into treatment.

"The substance-use-disorder problem is the largest public-health issue that we are facing today in Eastern Kentucky and many parts of our commonwealth," Lockard said.

Noting another major topic of Beshear's press briefing, Lockard said, "These great economic-development announcements are fabulous, but each one of those factories need people to work in them. Second-chance employment is huge, and we have so many people who are being impacted by substance-use disorder, especially in our part of the state, in Eastern Kentucky."

Lee County's recovery program is based in The Hub, in the health department's annex. "Our motto at the Hub is 'We meet people where they are, but we do not leave them there,' because it's key that everyone who comes through our door is treated with respect and dignity."

Lockard said the program has gotten more 230 people into treatment, including three that morning. They were immediately transported to a treatment facility, Lockard said: "When they're ready, we need to get them in there right then."

When people leave residential treatment, The Hub offers them 11 support groups, links to second-chance employment and "a ministry that fills the soul," Lockard said. "You know, this emptiness left by drugs, we need to fill it with somethng else, and if we can get individuals back and show them that they have worth, that they have dignity, then we have the possibility to really help them to be gainful members of our society and fill some of these many jobs and just have a higher quality of life."
 
Lockard said substance use must be approached as a disease. "We cannot incarcerate our way out of this problem." He said The Hub includes a court diversion program for low-level drug offenders.

Immediately before the recovery discussion, Beshear and State Police Commissioner P.J. Burnett announced a statewide drug roundup of 206 suspects, mostly on trafficking charges. Burnett said another 50 suspects are still being sought.

To be certified as recovery-ready, a county must have peer-support services, mental-health treatment, addiction treatment, employment services and a stigma-free environment to encourage recovery. The program "encourages communities to provide transportation to and from employment services and job interviews, allowing Kentuckians to make positive changes in their lives while filling much-needed jobs and contributing to the commonwealth’s record-breaking economic growth," a news release from Beshear's office said. 

The release included statements from representatives of the other counties.

“This is a huge step in continuing to move Breathitt County forward in applying for grants that will improve the lives of every person in our county,” said Breathitt County Circuit Court Clerk James Elliot Turner II. “We need to provide every opportunity for each person in Breathitt County to fulfill their potential. This is a win for our people.”

Shauna O’Nan, Jessamine County Health Department harm reduction director, said “There is no set path of recovery, but after going through this certification process, we are confident, as a community, that we will be able to meet people where they are on that path.”

In Nelson County, "Collaboration and community involvement underlie Nelson County’s efforts to provide recovery resources to its citizens," the release said. Jessica Bickett, safe-communities specialist with the Lincoln Trail District Health Department, said “Nelson County has a strong network of community partners who are committed to supporting the recovery community.”

"These communities are stepping up to help fellow Kentuckians who are struggling with addiction," Beshear said. "We are grateful for, and we applaud, their good work."

To learn more about the program and to apply for certification as a Recovery Ready Community, click here.

Paths to treatment

If you or a loved one are struggling with addiction, connect to treatment by calling 833-8KY-HELP (833-859-4357). Information about treatment programs all across the commonwealth is available at FindHelpNowKy.org.

Information on how to obtain the life-saving drug naloxone, which is used to reverse an opioid overdose, can be found at that website as well as at FindNaloxoneNowKy.org and FindMentalHealthNowKy.org.

Visit the State Police website to find a post where those suffering from addiction can be paired with a local officer who will assist with locating an appropriate treatment program through KSP’s Angel Initiative.

To find recovery housing, go to FindRecoveryHousingNowKY.org.

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Recovering alcoholic built Kentucky's largest substance-use treatment provider, which has 1,800 beds and 1,350 employees

Map from Addiction Recovery Care website, via Kentucky Lantern, adapted by Ky. Health News
By Deborah Yetter
Kentucky Lantern

LOUISA, Ky. — Around the office at Addiction Recovery Care, Vanessa Keeton is still known as “Client One” — marking her status as the first client of the first recovery center ARC opened as a group home in Lawrence County.

But her official title is vice president of marketing, where she has worked since 2012, a little more than a year after she entered the program known as Karen’s House — choosing it over jail for a string of drug and alcohol-related offenses.

Vanessa Keeton
(Lantern photo by Matthew Mueller)
“Dec. 2, 2010, that was my first day,” she said. “That’s a day I’ll never forget as long as I live. That’s the day that everything changed.”

ARC, too, has changed dramatically since it started as a treatment home for women run by volunteers, based largely on Bible study and prayer.

It now operates as a for-profit company paid $130 million last year by Medicaid, the federal-state health plan which in 2014 expanded access to addiction treatment, or substance-use disorder, as it’s now known.

Gov. Andy Beshear has praised ARC for helping Kentucky — ravaged in recent years by addiction and overdose deaths — become the state with the most treatment beds per resident in the nation, according to an East Tennessee State University study.

“With the help of organizations like ARC, we are working to build a safer, healthier commonwealth for our people,” Beshear said, speaking at an ARC ribbon-cutting for a new facility in March.

Owned by founder and CEO Tim Robinson and his wife, Lelia, the company provides the couple an annual income of about $533,400, according to a 2022 tax-filing by Odyssey Inc., a non-profit affiliated with ARC.

Tim Robinson (Lantern photo by Matthew Mueller)
Robinson said he and his wife struggled financially for years while establishing the treatment business — facing potential foreclosure on their home and repossession of their car. He doesn’t think that income is unreasonable.

“We took a lot of risks,” said Robinson, 48, a lawyer and recovered alcoholic who says he has been sober since 2006 — two years before he started building the faith-based treatment business that would become ARC. “I’m living the American dream. I’m doing better than I ever thought I could be doing financially.”

Kentucky’s largest provider

The fast-growing company is by far the state’s largest substance-use treatment provider, with 1,800 residential beds in 24 Kentucky counties, and reaches hundreds more clients through outpatient services. ARC, which estimates it provides 75% of treatment beds in Kentucky, also is planning programs in Ohio and Virginia.

Earlier this year, ARC opened a 40-bed behavioral health unit with plans to expand to 300 at the former Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital in Ashland, which closed in 2020. In 2020, ARC opened its largest center — with a capacity for 700 — on the campus of St. Catharine College in Springfield, which closed in 2016.

ARC is no longer simply a treatment organization, said Matt Brown, a former ARC client who overcame addiction and now serves as ARC’s chief administrative officer and president of ARC Healthcare. “We view ourselves as a behavioral health system,” Brown said.

While Christian faith remains at the heart of its mission, ARC relies on professional therapists, medical specialists including nurses and doctors, a structured treatment program and medication such as Suboxone to reduce the cravings of some patients for drugs and help them maintain sobriety, Robinson said.

Its religious component — which includes tracking how many clients decide “to follow Christ” (1,320 in 2023) — is strictly voluntary, according to Robinson, who said he was able to get sober in 2006 with the help of a local pastor and friend who “led me to the Lord.”

More importantly, he said, is that the number of clients who agree to stay in long-term treatment up to six months has increased steadily, which he thinks is the best indicator of effectiveness of the program.

Medicaid, which funds the majority of substance treatment, doesn’t require programs to measure outcomes.

But ARC measures its own outcomes, which it reports to Medicaid quarterly, Robinson said. That includes a retention rate of around 70% of its clients in treatment for up to six months and even longer through periodic contact with a case manager.

“I’ve been in this a long time,” Robinson said. “Long-term residential treatment is the reason people recover.”

As an indicator of success in addressing addiction, the Beshear administration points to the decline, for the second year in a row, of overdose deaths in Kentucky.

The state’s latest overdose report, released in June, shows a decrease in deaths to 1,984 from 2,200 the year before, a decline of 9.8%.

Last year, ARC received about $130 million in payments from Kentucky’s Medicaid program — more than double the amount of its closest competitor, Spero Health, a Nashville- based company that received $60 million in Kentucky Medicaid funds in 2023, according to the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, which licenses and oversees treatment facilities and Medicaid.

ARC accepts private insurance, but Robinson and Brown said almost all of the company’s revenue is from Medicaid, since their clients generally have lost jobs and any health insurance because of addiction.

The state spent $1.2 billion on substance-use-disorder services in the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2023, with most funds coming from the federal government, according to the cabinet.

Robinson, a former county prosecutor who started his business from a home office in Louisa, has emerged as a major political donor and well-connected business leader who recently joined the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce board.

Beshear singled out Robinson for recognition in his State of the Commonwealth speech in January, calling him “an essential partner in our fight against addiction.”

Robinson, a lifelong Republican, is effusive in praise for Beshear, a Democrat, in part because of the governor’s emphasis on addiction treatment and the governor’s frequent references to his own religious faith.

“I’ve never been for anybody like I’ve been for Andy Beshear,” Robinson said. “I hope he runs for president.”

‘Treatment on demand’

ARC employs 1,350 people, 500 at its headquarters in Louisa, population 2,600, perched above the forks of the Big Sandy River, across from West Virginia. The company is Lawrence County’s largest employer, even more than the school system.

About 40% of its workers are “graduates” of its treatment program, Robinson said, and most of its upper management — himself included — are in recovery from addiction.

ARC promises “treatment on demand,” and operates a 24-hour hotline people can call to identify help within 15 minutes, including transportation, if needed, to one of its centers. Last year it served more than 12,000 individuals from 119 of Kentucky’s 120 counties.

Tim Robinson in front of one of his buildings in 
downtown Louisa (Lantern photo by Deborah Yetter)
It has developed a network of job-training programs including welding, automotive repair, lawn service, culinary arts, chaplaincy and food service. As part of that, ARC has rebuilt more than a block of rundown buildings in downtown Louisa into a coffee shop, commercial kitchen, community theater and an event space.

It offers clients a chance to get certification toward a trade and get college credit for some training.

ARC owns a pharmacy used to provide medication to clients, a laboratory for medical testing and operates a health clinic in Louisa. Also, Tim and Lelia Robinson founded the private Millard School, a Christian academy in Louisa attended by some children of their employees.

Vanessa Keeton and her husband James live in Louisa and their son attends the Millard School. James, a 2011 ARC graduate, manages the Second Chance garage which repairs and restores vehicles for the public as well as maintaining an ARC fleet of about 200. “We restore cars and we restore lives,” he said.

ARC runs a sophisticated marketing program complete with a website, billboards, television and radio commercials, a social media presence, sponsorships and news releases, contracting with the Louisville-based public relations firm, RunSwitch. Scott Jennings, a CNN commentator and Republican political consultant, is one of RunSwitch’s founding partners. ARC spends about 4.5% of its revenue, or about $5.8 million a year on marketing.

Vanessa Keeton said the marketing is important to promote awareness of its services to those in need, “to meet people where you are.”

‘Dangerously brilliant’?

Some outsiders criticize ARC for its rapid growth, its size and Robinson’s political giving, including Mark La Palme, the founder and former CEO of Isaiah House, a treatment program based in Harrodsburg.

La Palme, now retired, said he worked with Robinson on a project in the mid-2000s but parted ways over disagreement with practices including designating clients as “interns” in ARC programs for low pay while in treatment, saving the company the cost of paying a regular employee.

He calls ARC “huge,” has called it a “bully” in a social media post and questions its rapid expansion. La Palme also questions the prolific giving of Robinson and ARC entities, which rank among the state’s major political contributors.

“It seems like you’re buying political influence,” he said.

But he acknowledges that Robinson has been highly effective in building ARC into the state’s largest treatment system: “He’s dangerously brilliant.”

Robinson said he considered La Palme a friend and colleague but they parted ways after a proposed collaboration fell through. Robinson said ARC’s programs meet all state standards, are accredited and the company works to provide high quality care.

He said internships are a way of introducing people to job skills they will need to succeed once they leave treatment and interns in various job training programs receive a paycheck either through ARC or an outside employer.

Robinson said he doesn’t apologize for political giving, seeing it as a way to support causes and politicians he believes in.

And he doesn’t think ARC is too big, saying that the company had to expand to remain viable within the constraints of Medicaid reimbursement, which pays for most of its clients. “We had to grow to survive,” he said.

The Robinson employees who spoke with Kentucky Lantern, including Brown, are highly enthusiastic about the boss.

Brown, trained as a physical therapist, battled addiction for 18 years before coming to ARC as a patient and remaining as an employee.

Robinson is “a visionary,” Brown said during a tour of ARC properties in Louisa, “He sees things in people before they see it in themselves.”

‘Papaw taught me’

Robinson said he grew up in adjoining Martin County, in “the poorest part” of a poor county. His introduction to business came from his grandfather who owned a country store. “He put me on a pop carton to run the cash register,” he said. “Papaw taught me about business.”

Another boyhood business venture of Robinson’s — selling baseball cards — would provide a life-changing entrée into college and law school, when he was befriended by Inez banker and businessman Mike Duncan, a former Republican national chairman and mentor to many young people in Martin County.

Robinson said he and Duncan crossed paths when he began selling baseball cards to Duncan's son, Robert M. “Rob” Duncan, who was appointed U.S. attorney for Eastern Kentucky under Donald Trump. Duncan is now the top deputy to state Attorney General Russell Coleman.

Robinson said he considers both Duncans friends but remains closest to Mike Duncan, a trusted friend and adviser. He said Mike Duncan, showed interest in his boyhood baseball-card venture and became a mentor, encouraging Robinson to go to college — a prospect he hadn’t considered.

“Nobody in my family ever went to college,” Robinson said.

But with Duncan’s encouragement, Robinson graduated from the University of the Cumberlands in Williamsburg, earned a law degree from the University of Kentucky and was elected student body president at both institutions.

Good times and bad times

“He helped me through the good times and the bad times,” Robinson said.

Among the worst times: Robinson’s 2003 indictment for felony vote fraud while he was student body president at UK, after some 750 voter registration cards collected during a student government drive were never turned in. Apparently forgotten, they were later found in a student-government office, according to a 2003 Lexington Herald-Leader story.

“It was devastating,” Robinson said. “I thought my whole life was over.”

Instead, with the help of his lawyers, Robinson pleaded guilty to a lesser misdemeanor charge of failing to turn in the registration cards and paid $90 restitution. Robinson said he dropped out of law school during the legal case, but was readmitted and graduated.

But that ordeal, plus the death of his mother while he was at UK, “finished my mental health off,” Robinson said. He returned home to Eastern Kentucky to work but alcohol by then had a powerful hold on his life.

Back in Lawrence County, Robinson joined in law practice with a friend and became an assistant county attorney but by then said he had become a “raging alcoholic” though still somehow able to perform his job.

He would drink on weekends, come to work on Mondays hung over and avoid alcohol on days he had to be in court. Toward the end of the week, Robinson said, he’d resume drinking and stay drunk till the following Monday. “I was leading kind of a double life,” he said.

That continued until a deputy sheriff at the courthouse where Robinson worked intervened. The deputy, also a pastor and a recovering alcoholic, helped Robinson stop drinking through prayer and support — taking him with him to nightly events where he would preach and play Bluegrass music.

Though Robinson said he knew nothing about treatment or programs such as Alcoholics Anonymous, he decided he needed to expand services in the region that in the mid-2000s offered little.

“I was convinced God was calling me to stop practicing law and start a recovery center,” Robinson said.

So he did, leaving his law job and starting out of a home office on Nov. 3, 2008.

Robinson got help from Rev. Ralph Beiting, a Catholic priest who founded the Christian Appalachian Project. Together they opened a recovery house for women in Lawrence County called Karen’s House.

It was a makeshift operation run by volunteers with donated goods, including some old Army cots. Meanwhile, Robinson was taking men to the closest treatment center, Chad’s Hope in Clay County, getting occasional funding from Operation UNITE, launched in 2003 by U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers to help Kentucky battle rising addiction — in particular the tide of opioid pain pills engulfing the state.

But broke and discouraged, Robinson was close to quitting when he contacted a consultant who suggested he expand by opening a second recovery center for men. He located a site in Fleming County and in 2013, Belle Grove Springs was opened by the company that would become ARC.

Brown, now ARC’s chief administrative officer, was among the first clients admitted to the men’s center.

The following year, under the expansion authorized by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Medicaid began funding substance use disorder services and a reliable funding stream opened. Kentucky was among the first states to include addiction as a service covered by Medicaid.

While the income was welcome, it wasn’t enough to finance ARC’s operation and Robinson said the company’s only choice was to expand and recoup more money through a higher volume of clients. “People thought we were growing because we were booming but we had to grow to survive,” he said. “You cannot make it on a couple of small facilities.”

ARC didn’t show a positive cash flow until 2019, he said.

‘Take our time’

While ARC expansion has slowed, Robinson said the company is still looking at other opportunities, including expansion into Virginia, which has far fewer treatment beds than Kentucky. “We’re going to take our time,” he said.

ARC also was flagged in a budget item this year by the state General Assembly with a $12 million allocation over two years directed to the Life Learning Center in Covington, an organization aimed at helping people develop skills to improve their lives “through gainful employment.”

The budget line says the funds are to be distributed to the center to support “treatment, rehabilitation, and community reintegration in partnership with Odyssey Inc.,” the non-profit arm affiliated with ARC.

Robinson said he expects Odyssey to submit a proposal as treatment provider for a program the center plans to establish in Somerset.

And while his work has expanded statewide and beyond, Robinson said he’s committed to staying in Louisa and keeping his company headquartered there.

“I’m where I’m going to be,” he said. “This is my adopted hometown.”

Sunday, June 30, 2024

Some Ky. counties using settlement money to make new opioid-withdrawal treatment available to a small number of residents

The device uses low-intensity electrical pulses to reduce
withdrawal symptoms. (WDRB photo, from NET Recovery Corp.)
This story has been updated.

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

four Kentucky counties are making a new treatment to reduce opioid-withdrawal symptoms available free to a few of their residents, using money from the state's settlements with drug manufacturers and distributors.

Three more counties are in the queue, and others are in discussion. Counties and most Kentucky cities get half the settlement money, more than $900 million over the next 15 years.

Meade, Scott, Bullitt and Franklin counties have committed settlement money for the treatment of limited numbers of residents with opioid-use disorder. Letcher and Shelby counties are in the process of final approval, and Bell County is in discussions with NET Recovery Corp.

The company is named for the "neuro-electric therapy" that its non-invasive "NET Device" delivers. Asked about the device's success rate, company spokesman Jeff Lott said, "A person treated with the NET Device for more than one day is significantly more likely to remain opioid-free without medication."

The amount of money committed to NET Recovery for treatment from each county varies. 

Company spokesman Jeff Lott said since the NET Device gained U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval, the cost for a treatment is $5,500. He said in an email that some counties received a discount if they started negotiations before FDA approval. 

"If we had already started negotiations with an amount for less than $5,500, we are still honoring that price for the first contract," Lott said. 

In Bullitt County, CFO and Community Development Director Keith Griffee said the county has signed a service contract for $50,000 to provide treatment services for 15 residents, or $3,333 per person.

The same per-person figure applies in Meade County, where Treasurer Tammy Graham said the county had allocated $60,000 of its opioid-abatement money for services to 18 residents.

Scott County Court Clerk Stacy Hamilton said Scott County had approved $110,000 for 34 residents. That amounts to $3,235 per person.

Franklin County's $75,000 contract is for 15 patients at $5,000 each, The State Journal reports.  

Lott said Shelby County plans to vote on its contract Tuesday, July 2. He said the county is looking to commit $100,000 to the program. He did not say how many residents this contract would serve. 

He said Franklin County had voted to approve a service agreement for $75,000 to cover 15 patients, but the contract has not been signed. That amounts to $5,000 per person.

Lott said NET Recovery is still in talks with Letcher County, which had backed out of its initial $125,000 contract with NET Recovery.  Lott said the two-year contracts allow either party to terminate the contract. 

"It is my understanding that they still want to participate for a lesser amount," Lott said.

He said the company is working to get other counties "to help their people get a brand new FDA-cleared treatment that can change the lives of their residents."

"We are counting on the counties to help fund this," Lott said. "If anyone has a question about how they can get their county to sponsor it, they can email me. I'd love to talk them through it." (His email address is jeff.lott@netrecovery.net.)

Isaiah House lauds NET Device

The neuro-electric therapy to reduce withdrawal symptoms will be offered exclusively through Isaiah House, a Christian-based rehabilitation center based in Harrodsburg.

The NET Device (Photo from company website)
Mike Cox, chief operating officer of Isaiah House, said the treatment involves taping tiny electrodes behind the participant's mastoid process, behind the ear, to deliver a carefully programmed series of tiny electrical pulses that stimulate the production of the body's natural neurotransmitters, such as endorphins.

"We know that those neurotransmitters become depleted and replaced by the drug" chosen by those with opioid-use disorder, Cox said. "When a person tries to stop taking the drug, then he or she begins to experience intense cravings and the body goes into withdrawal. It is that terrible experience of intense cravings, that horrible sickness that keeps people from stopping using the substance that keeps them using. Not for the euphoria of it, but just to survive." 

He said they will have 30 reusable units on hand for the treatment, which lasts five to seven days.

While the device will be helpful, Cox said, it is not the single solution. 

"We see it as a tool to help them on the front end of treatment," he said. "This device is a new tool in the toolbox to really help people overcome the fear and experience of being sick from withdrawal and the intense cravings, which are . . . really the reasons why many people are afraid to get treatment." 

According to state data, in 2023, nearly 80% of Kentucky's overdose deaths involved opioids.

Medications are available to treat opioid-use disorder, but Cox noted that many people use more than one substance. And while the clinical trial of the NET Device focused on opiates, he said it also helps with the withdrawal symptoms of other drugs, from nicotine to methamphetamine.

"We know the device to be effective for all drugs," Cox said. "They have specific programming for each type of drug, which makes this device unique. . . . The additional upside to this device over medications is that it addresses the concerns of abuse and diversion."

Later, he said, "We have witnessed, really the positive impact of this device on a lot of people without any negative side effects. And, FDA approval is further evidence of the efficacy of this device in reducing cravings and withdrawal symptoms."

Cox said Isaiah House will only be paid a "small amount" for the additional work required by his staff to offer the therapy.

Who qualifies for it? 

Cox said participants will be considered for the NET Device on a case-by-case basis. "We just want to help people," he said.

Because insurance does not pay for the treatment, Lott said, "At this time, we're only focusing on treating people from counties who have paid for it or anyone can choose to pay and be treated." 

Bullitt County's contract says the participant must be diagnosed with opioid-use disorder, be admitted on a separately paid basis into a participating service program with a residential drug-addiction treatment facility, be a resident of the contracted county, and meet the clinical eligibility for the treatment, including a desire to participate in the program. 

Lott added that a participant must also be 18, and cannot be pregnant or have a pacemaker.

Cox said Isaiah House is starting the program in one of its men's facilities in Washington County and one of its women's facilities in Mercer County. Eventually, he said the treatment would be offered at all of their residential facilities.

Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Health department director says she has work to do, to educate Attorney General Coleman about syringe exchanges

Dr. Crystal Miller with state
Health Commissioner Stack
Kentucky Health News

The director of a district health department with a syringe exchange has voiced disappointment to her local newspaper over Attorney General Russell Coleman's opposition to the exchanges.

Dr. Crystal Miller, director of the Wedco Health District, which serves Scott, Harrison and Nicholas counties, told the Georgetown News-Graphic that syringe-exchange programs are misunderstood.

“It is unfortunate that our attorney general doesn’t support syringe service programs,” Miller told the newspaper. “We have work to do to educate him on grasping a full understanding of what this program entails.”

Noting Coleman's statements to Kentucky Health News, Miller said, “This program is designed around the very things he’s supportive of, prevention and treatment. We work closely with community partners to create a system that no matter where someone enters, we know how to link them to an agency that can assist. Substance abuse is a problem in our society that we will never enforce our way out of, and successful mitigation requires all hands-on deck. Syringe service programs are a framework for that in our community.”

The News-Graphic notes, "Approval for such a program, here, was difficult and strongly opposed by the Scott County Fiscal Court several times until a magistrate who once opposed such a program became aware of a situation involving someone he knew and reversed his opposition."

Miller said, “At surface level, syringe service programs can be misconceived. This program provides an entry point to many resources for people who use drugs and allows us to promote recovery. Through this program alone, we have referred people to treatment for drug use, linked them to care and resources within the community to help them make better, healthier choices.

"We have success stories of people recovering in every SSP program across Kentucky. However, one of the biggest successes within this program is the amount of hepatitis C and HIV that we have been able to detect and treat within our communities. Without this program, we would not have identified communicable diseases that are killing people and costing taxpayers large amount of money. Just within the Wedco District, through our SSP program, we have saved taxpayers $1.3 million in early identification/treatment of Hepatitis C. We are effective at prevention and treatment and the data proves it."

As for Coleman's concern that syringe exchanges promote drug use, Miller said, “I can assure you that not one participant has ever reached our doors and decided to start using drugs because we are providing clean syringes. We prevent the spread of disease, focus on reducing as many barriers as possible and being a resource to helping people make better decisions and recover, all while saving taxpayers money. I hope that we can work more closely with our AG to help him understand and support the impact that this program has in communities.”

More than half of Kentucky's counties have syringe exchanges.

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Fewer dying from overdoses, but advocates say Kentucky needs more people mentoring others through addiction and recovery

The availability of Narcan has helped reduce overdoses.
(Photo by Morgan Watkins, Louisville Public Media)
By Sylvia Goodman

Louisville Public Media

Shawn Nutter walks through The Healing Place’s men's facility in Louisville’s Russell neighborhood. He just completed the months-long recovery program, and now, Nutter’s working as a peer mentor for other people going through the same thing.

“You get six guys to get to intimately know, so you get to really understand what's going on with them,” Nutter said as he wound through the facility. “The things that could possibly help them or maybe hindered them in this process.”

He says he feels like he’s found his calling. Before coming to the Healing Place, Nutter said he worked as a chef, but now he wants to get certified as a peer support specialist.

“I want to know everybody that comes through here just because I like to know people,” Nutter said.

It’s a specialization sorely needed in the state. Earlier this month, Kentucky’s Office of Drug Control Policy released its annual report on fatal overdoses. For the second year in a row, overdose deaths went down (9.8 percent, more than triple the national decrease of 3%) but remain well above the levels the state saw before a 2020 spike rocked Kentucky.

And the numbers aren’t down across the board. Deaths continue to rise among Black Kentuckians, who have yet to see a decline since 2020. In 2018, 77 Black Kentuckians died of fatal overdoses, according to the report. Last year, 264 Black people in Kentucky did.

Gov. Andy Beshear declared the secind reduction in a row a win for the state while acknowledging there is more left to do. “We still have a long way to go, but celebrating success, celebrating doing better, celebrating having a better year is what gives us the strength to do even more,” he said.

Tara Hyde, CEO of Louisville's People Advocating Recovery, attributed the spike to the isolation of the pandemic and a drug supply heavily saturated with the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl. “The fact remains that thousands of people have still lost their lives,” she said. “Thousands of families have been impacted.”

Hyde says advocates and service providers in the state know the work is far from over, especially in Black and Brown communities across the state. “We still are hesitant to really create more recovery supported spaces I think that's the re-energizing of saying, ‘I know that these systems are working, we just need to keep moving in that direction’.”

Improving outcomes for those in treatment

Recovery-supported housing, community centers and employment centers are popping up around the state to aid people as they leave treatment. Hyde said there are many examples across the state that her group has helped to foster, but services aren’t always centered in the communities that need them most.

Sharon Walsh, the director of the University of Kentucky’s Center on Drug and Alcohol Research, largely credits the decline in deaths to the much more widespread availability of the overdose-reversing drug naloxone, branded Narcan, which Walsh called a “miracle drug.”

Walsh said the 2020 spike in Kentucky was horrific and she can’t imagine how bad it would have been without the availability of naloxone, but she says there’s still work to be done the day after someone survives an overdose.

“You pick [naloxone] up at a fair, and then you have it in your pocket, and maybe you get to use it,” Walsh said. “That's incredible that you get to save someone's life. Does it make a longer term difference for that person whose life you saved? That's where the critical importance of linkage and education comes in.”

It’s an emphasis on those post-treatment spaces that could lead to declines in overall overdose numbers, Walsh said. She also emphasized the importance of working directly in the most impacted communities.

“People want to go to providers that look like them,” Walsh said. “If there aren't any providers that look like them, then that is also another barrier.”

A lot stands in people’s way of accessing that care, Walsh said. In rural communities, the closest treatment center can be hours away, or in majority Black areas with historic under-investment, medical care in general is often difficult to access.

“There's some very innovative programs going on with our colleagues out in Jefferson County that really can serve as models for other people to do, but they definitely need to be scaled up,” Walsh said.

There are several organizations in Kentucky that have boots on the ground going in to provide harm reduction and education to people directly — things like naloxone, fentanyl testing strips and hygiene supplies.

Abbie Kent is on the street team of the New Day Recovery Center in Winchester. She travels across the state, from urban areas to tent camps in rural Kentucky forests. Kent said the fact that she lived through to recovery and is able to provide resources to people breaks down barriers.

“They see me with a two-year-old track mark,” she said. “I was an IV drug user for the better part of 20 years, and my arm shows that when I come to people. They realize I'm not just some clinician.”

Kent said she is out there every day for people, going into overdose hotspots without judgment. “It's not about evangelizing, it's about planting the seed with people, and then making sure they have the resources to turn around and help somebody else,” she said, adding that she is able to build that trust only by being in those spaces and making herself a part of the community. Then when people need help, they know whom to ask.

Friday, May 31, 2024

First naxolone shipment under settlement with drug maker arrives

Teva Pharmaceuticals' generic naloxone
Kentucky Health News

Nearly 8,000 doses of naloxone, which reverses the effects of drug overdose, were delivered to Kentucky this week as part of a settlement with Teva Pharmaceuticals, Attorney General Russell Coleman announced.

In October, Teva agreed to pay the state more than $71 million over 13 years, resolving allegations that the company’s marketing and promotional practices fueled the opioid-overdose crisis. In addition to the cash payments, Teva agreed to provide more than 23,000 units of naloxone.

The shipment, the first of four expected this year, went to facilities in Louisville, Florence, Ashland, Paducah and Frankfort. The Opioid Commission is partnering with the Cabinet for Health and Family Services as well as the Kentucky Pharmacists Association for distribution.

“Naloxone is a critical lifeline for Kentucky families struggling with addiction,” Coleman said in a news release. “Equipping first responders, health professionals and treatment providers with this all-important medication can help save lives for Kentuckians on the road to recovery.”

Half of all opoid-settlement funds go to local governments. The state's half is distribited by the Kentucky Opioid Abatement Advisory Commission is responsible for the distribution, part of the attorney general's office. On Tuesday, June 4,, the commission will award its next round of grants.

Kentuckians can find out how to get free naloxone near them at FindNaloxoneNowKY.org. Naloxone is also sold under the brand name Narcan by Emergent Solutions Inc.

Friday, May 17, 2024

Kentucky treatment and recovery leaders honored with awards

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

Six Kentuckians were honored with 2024 Champions of Recovery Awards at the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce's ninth annual Kentucky Workforce Summit held in Lexington on May 14. 

The awards are sponsored by the Kentucky Association of Independent Recovery Organizations and the Recovery Consortium of Kentucky.

Recipients of the inaugural KAIROS Legislative Champion Award, recognizing state legislators who have partnered to advance significant legislation to improve treatment resources, standards of patient care, and long-term results for Kentuckians, were:
  • Rep. Kim Moser, R-Taylor Mill — lead sponsor of this year's House Bill 505, which amended requirements for peer-support specialists to increase accountability and standardize qualifications, training and oversight across the industry to help better serve persons in treatment.
  • Rep. Samara Heavrin, R-Leitchfield — lead sponsor of last year’s HB 248 (and co-sponsor of this year’s HB 462), which established quality standards for recovery housing in Kentucky – a critical component to sustaining long-term recovery among individuals with substance-use disorder.
  • Sen. Phillip Wheeler, R-Pikeville — lead sponsor of this year’s Senate Bill 71, which implemented guidelines for addiction-treatment centers to provide transportation services to clients leaving recovery programs and included important guardrails for the alternative sentencing worker program.
“The 2,100 plus dedicated professionals represented by KAIROS are extremely grateful for our strong legislative partners,” John Wilson, Addiction Recovery Care market president and KAIROS chairman, said in a news release from the two groups. “Thanks to their collaboration and commitment, we are advancing the commonwealth as a national leader in addiction treatment and recovery.”

Three Kentuckians were inducted into the fourth annual RECON Kentucky Recovery Hall of Fame. These awards recognize individuals in long-term recovery and those who have taken a leading role in addressing Kentucky’s addiction crisis through prevention, treatment, education and advocacy efforts. Two of the awards are named after inaugural inductees U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers and Jay Davidson of The Healing Place.

Nancy Hale
(All photos provided)
Nancy Hale, of Mount Vernon, received the Congressman Hal Rogers Award, which recognizes Kentucky public officials who have advocated legislation and policies that address the addiction crisis and help Kentuckians with substance-use disorders reach long-term recovery.

Hale received the award for her 34-year career in public education and her efforts to help lead Operation UNITE, an innovative substance misuse and recovery collaboration serving 33 southern and eastern Kentucky counties, for more than a decade. Hale served as Operation UNITE's third president and CEO from 2015-2023. UNITE is an acronym for Unlawful Narcotics Investigations, Treatment and Education. 

Dr. Burns M. Brady
The late Dr. Burns M. Brady of Louisville posthumously received the Jay Davidson Award, which recognizes an individual in recovery who has helped to support Kentuckians with their long-term recovery.

Brady was a family doctor for 25 years, co-founded The Healing Place, an award-winning Louisville-based addiction recovery program serving individuals at no cost to the client, and volunteered extensively across the U.S. to help with recovery efforts in the prison system, the release said.
Logan Aluminum
of Russellville received the Second Chance Employer of the Year Award for its fair-chance employment of people in recovery and advocacy of the Chamber’s Workforce Recovery Program. Logan Aluminum was also influential in the passage of SB 191 in 2020, which provides businesses with liability protections when hiring individuals in recovery through the Kentucky Transformational Employment Program, according to the release.

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Database lists opioid-settlement payments to local governments

Screenshot of first page of KFF Health News database of settlement
payments
 in Kentucky through March 4 shows the top 15 recipients.
How much money are your local governments getting from the settlements of lawsuits filed against opioid manufacturers and distributors? You can track it with a new online database from KFF Health News.

Kentucky is getting $478 million from the settlements through 2038, and a like amount is being paid each year to local governments in the state. State government got $100.7 million in 2022 and $17.4 million in 2023. It will get $21.8 million this year and the same amount in 2025, and an average of $24 million a year after that.

The state's money is being allocated by the Kentucky Opioid Abatement Advisory Commission, operated out of the attorney general's office. Local governments' spending is up to their governing bodies.

"This database undercounts the amount of opioid settlement money most places have received and will receive," note Aneri Pattani and Lydia Zuraw and Holly K. Hacker of KFF Health News.

The database reflects only the largest settlement so far, $26 billion to be paid by pharmaceutical distributors AmerisourceBergen (now called Cencora), Cardinal Health, and McKesson, as well as opioid manufacturer Janssen (now known as Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine).

It does not include settlements with other drug manufacturers and retailers Walmart, Walgreens, and CVS. Data from these five companies will be added in July, according to BrownGreer, the settlement firm that gets the money and makes the payments. It is not handling some additional settlements such as the agreement between Kentucky and four Midwestern states with regional supermarket chain Meijer.

Other settlements, including with OxyContin manufacturer Purdue Pharma, are pending.

Thursday, March 14, 2024

Website that helps Kentuckians find addiction treatment now helps them find naloxone, the drug that reverses opioid overdoses

Photo from Kelley-Ross Pharmacy Group
Kentucky Health News

The FindHelpNowKy.org website, which helps Kentuckians find addiction treatment, now also can help them find places to get naloxone, which reverses opioid overdose.

The website, which has been used over 240,000 times to facilities since its inception in 2018, now also includes social-services resources and locators for recovery housing and mental-health treatment.

In 2022, a Kentucky survey found that 73 percent of respondents said they didn't know where to get naloxone, often known by the leading brand, Narcan.

“We are making it easier for Kentuckians to find the life-saving help they need,” Gov. Andy Beshear said in a press release. “While there is always more work to be done, we are taking another step forward on our mission to help our families fight and overcome addiction.”

Naloxone has become more available thanks to retailers, grants, reduction of stigma associated with addiction, and proactive distribution by community organizations,local health departments, recovery centers and regional prevention centers, the release said.

In addition to the central hub of FindHelpNowKy.org, some of the services can also be reached at FindMentalHealthNowKy.org; FindRecoveryHousingNowKy.org and FindNaloxoneNowKy.org. The latter website provides overdose prevention and response training relevant to people most likely to witness overdose.

“People can and do recover from addiction and mental health issues,” said state Health Secretary Eric Friedlander said. “And our goal of bundling these services in one central location will only make that journey to recovery easier across the continuum of risk.”

The collaborators on this website are the Kentucky Injury Prevention and Research Center and the state departments for Public Health and Behavioral Health, Developmental and Intellectual Disabilities.

“Addiction and mental health issues affect Kentuckians in every county and every ZIP code,” said Dr. Katie Marks, commisisoner of the latter department. “There should be no shame in seeking help and no barriers to finding evidence-based, compassionate care and treatment. These website updates address that at its core – getting our fellow Kentuckians on their road to recovery with resources that are close in proximity and right for them.”

The National Alliance on Mental Illness says 1 in 20 U.S. adults experience serious mental illness each year. In Kentucky, 189,000 adults are reported as having a serious mental illness, the release said.

If you or a loved one are struggling with addiction, the KY HELP Call Center can connect you to treatment by calling 833-8KY-HELP (833-859-4357). Visit the Kentucky State Police website to find a police post where those suffering from addiction can be paired with a local officer who will assist with locating an appropriate treatment program through KSP’s Angel Initiative. Call, text, or online chat 988 to connect with suicide-prevention, mental-health and substance-use-disorder counselors. They are available to all Kentuckians 24/7/365, the release said.