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Over the last 10 years, the group's mission has expanded and it's become a model for similar addiction-related agencies across the state and the country.
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Hamilton County has already received upwards of $7 million in opioid settlements, with millions more to come. How is the county spending its payout?
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A new database tracks how state and local governments across the country are spending billions of dollars in opioid settlement funds. In Ohio, about half of those funds are untraceable.
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Keys 2 Serenity, a Summit County nonprofit, is one of hundreds of grant applicants who didn’t get funding from the OneOhio Recovery Foundation this round. The group wants to build a support group for teens and young adults who lost a parent to the opioid crisis.
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On Monday, the court re-affirmed a decision that has been derided and mocked by legal scholars and media pundits all over the nation. On Tuesday, it handed a win to pharmacy chains, possibly upending a $650 million relief effort to Ohio's opioid epidemic.
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President-elect Donald Trump has promised a crackdown on fentanyl dealers that could include military strikes against cartels in Mexico. Many experts worry his plan will do harm than good.
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Newtown Police Chief Tom Synan, head of the Hamilton County Heroin Coalition, featured on the special airing 9 p .m. Thursday, Oct. 31.
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We’ll learn more about Kentucky’s new addiction prevention program.
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After decades of devastating increases driven by fentanyl and other toxic street drugs, overdose deaths are dropping sharply in much of the U.S., including Ohio.
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Ohio is getting more than a billion dollars in settlement money to compensate for the harm of opioids. The state is taking lessons from past mistakes with an even larger drug settlement decades ago.