It鈥檒l be a while before the state puts out new official numbers on Ohio鈥檚 deadly opioid crisis. However, the federal Centers for Disease Control says it has new stats that show the epidemic is nowhere close to slowing down.

The CDC says the number of deadly overdoses in Ohio soared 39 percent from July of 2016 to last July. That鈥檚 more than twice as much as the national increase in deadly overdoses in that same period.
Lori Criss is the CEO of the Ohio Council of Behavioral Health Providers. She says prevention services are underfunded and that treatment options need to be continued because recovery can take 3-5 years. 鈥淯ntil we start really investing in that full range of services over a 0-5 year time period, we鈥檒l be caught in the same cycle,鈥 she adds. And Criss notes that overdose deaths are increasing not just for opioids, but for other drugs such as meth and cocaine 鈥 which the deadly opioid fentanyl can be mixed into.
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