Skip to Main Content

Premier Health Receives Nearly $2 Million Grant to Fight Substance Abuse

 Back To News

Premier Health Receives Nearly $2 Million Grant to Fight Substance Abuse

Jun 30, 2021

Premier Health Receives Nearly $2 Million Grant to Fight Substance Abuse

Support Will Expand Emergency Department Programming

 

DAYTON, Ohio (June 24, 2021) – Premier Health, in partnership with ProMedica, has received a nearly $2 million grant from the Ohio Department of Health to treat emergency department patients struggling with substance abuse and connect them with the help they need.

 

This funding, part of the Comprehensive Care for Substance Use in Ohio Emergency Departments (CCOED) program, will enhance and expand the extensive work currently being done at Miami Valley Hospital, Miami Valley Hospital North, Atrium Medical Center, as well as three ProMedica sites.

 

“Premier Health emergency departments are in a position to be an access point for those individuals struggling with addiction, both in obvious and not-so-obvious cases,” said Candy Skidmore, vice-president of emergency and trauma services for Premier Health. “The CCOED program will allows us to develop effective screening tools to assist with identifying more individuals who may greatly benefit from supportive services in the community, and then strengthen pathways to connect the two.”

 

CCOED has three overarching goals:

  • Identify patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) by implementing a screening process in EDs;
  • Manage OUD by implementing evidence-based practices in emergency medicine;
  • Transition patients to long-term care and supportive services using innovative processes that improve pathways to treatment. These goals will be met through comprehensive activities structured around screening, medication-assisted treatment (MAT), naloxone distribution, linkages to care and a real-time treatment finder. 

 

Emergency departments serve a wide variety of patients, including those who are experiencing health disparities and health inequities, as well as those who are uninsured and/or without access to primary care. The CCOED program will help emergency departments’ efforts to identify anyone who may need to be connected to substance abuse services.

 

Premier Health will continue to strengthen its collaboration with local organizations, such as Samaritan Behavioral Health for diagnosing abuse and crisis response and OneFifteen for both inpatient and outpatient treatment options.

 

About Premier Health

Based in Dayton, Ohio, Premier Health has a mission to improve the health of the communities it serves. The health system has five hospital locations: Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton with additional inpatient sites at Miami Valley Hospital South in Centerville and Miami Valley Hospital North in Englewood; Atrium Medical Center in Middletown; and Upper Valley Medical Center in Miami County. Home to the region’s only Level I adult trauma center, the health system offers a wide range of care choices, including virtual care; e-visits; a telestroke network and other telehealth options; an urgent care network; free-standing emergency departments; a large primary and specialty care network; and home health services.

 

Media Contact:

Jennifer Burcham

mobile (513) 214-8307

jmburcham@premierhealth.com

Copied!
^TOP
close
ModalContent
loading gif