High-impact regional symposiums on deck for rural Indiana; healthcare, state, federal, county, addiction officials to address crisis

When:
July 26, 2018 @ 8:30 am – 4:00 pm America/Indiana/Indianapolis Timezone
2018-07-26T08:30:00-04:00
2018-07-26T16:00:00-04:00
Where:
Heartland REMC
350 Wedcor Ave.
Wabash IN
Contact:
Beth Archer

Indiana Rural Health Association, AgrIInstitute

 host regional meetings to help combat, find solutions for continuing addiction emergency

 TERRE HAUTE, Indiana – Drawing on experts in multiple disciplines from national, state and local levels, the Indiana Rural Health Association (IRHA) and AgrIInstitute will jointly host four regional high-impact opioid crisis symposiums in rural Indiana areas during July and August.
 “This ongoing crisis continues to savagely and relentlessly penetrate every aspect of society in Indiana, including rural areas” said Don Kelso, IRHA executive director. “Professionals have come together from many disciplines to address this opioid health emergency, and we want to ensure that all Hoosiers have access to critical information and resources at all levels.”
 “The intense attention being given to the opioid addiction crisis has helped many of us become better informed and more knowledgeable,” said Beth Archer, AgrIInstitute executive director. Emphasizing that this crisis “knows no boundaries,” Archer continued: “An important step in resolving this crisis is becoming better informed citizens – that means becoming better informed about what each of us can do in our homes, in our communities, in our workplaces, in our churches, and elsewhere, so healthy living can again be possible for those whom we care about.”
Key leaders and regional professionals involved in addressing the crisis will take part, including Jim McClelland, Indiana State Executive Director for Drug Prevention, Treatment and Enforcement (who also chairs the Indiana Commission to Combat Drug Abuse); Michael Dora, USDA State Director , Rural Development, for Indiana; Boone County Sheriff Mike Neilson; Amnah Anwar, program director of the Indiana Rural Opioid Consortium (IROC); officials from the Dearborn County Jail Chemical Addiction Program (JCAP); and other professionals and social workers.
 Kelso noted that Archer and AgrIInstitute organized and was the catalyst that produced a “very successful” symposium in Boone County about the statewide opioid crisis earlier this year that was “standing room only.”  That January symposium was supported by IRHA and others. This summer, AgrIInstitute and IRHA partnered together to extend the availability of this information and program resources to other areas of the state.
 “There is no single solution to this pervasive crisis, but many offer hope” said Deena Dodd, IRHA Network Development Officer and an organizer of the opioid symposiums. “We collectively want to serve as a catalyst for strategic discussion and conversation between service providers, expert resources, law enforcement officials, healthcare professionals to help move us toward implementing targeted solutions and find resolution for this terrible ongoing tragedy.”
 The four events are open to the public. IRHA and AgrIInstitute officials specifically invite the participation of elected county officials, civic leaders, medical professionals, educators, agri-industry executives, members and leaders of faith-based organizations, and business leaders to attend. Each symposium will have morning and afternoon presentations and discussions, and a catered lunch from a local vendor will be served. A registration fee of $30 is being collected to cover the costs of materials and the lunch.
More information and registration

|2018-06-25T16:28:19-04:00June 25th, 2018|Comments Off on High-impact regional symposiums on deck for rural Indiana; healthcare, state, federal, county, addiction officials to address crisis

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James Dudley

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