Connecticut Crafts 3-Year Opioid Plan

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy addresses the plan at Yale University School of Medicine Thursday.
Twitter: @GovMalloyOffice

The Connecticut Opioid Response Team and the state’s Alcohol and Drug Policy Council have supplied Governor Dannel Malloy’s administration with a plan to tackle Connecticut’s opioid crisis.Malloy accepted the three-year strategy Thursday. It calls for increasing access to medication-assisted treatment such as methadone, strengthening prescription guidelines and targeting geographic areas of high need.

“We have to have now learned that there is a significant portion of the addicted society who simply can’t just beat the addiction on their own,” Malloy said. “They need additional assistance.”

With Connecticut already spending more than $65 million a year on opioid dependency treatment, Malloy noted that not every aspect of the report will be funded immediately.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
Jim is WAMC’s Assistant News Director and hosts WAMC's flagship news programs: Midday Magazine, Northeast Report and Northeast Report Late Edition. Email: jlevulis@wamc.org