H79TI085757
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
North Carolina State Opioid Response - The primary purpose of the proposed project is to continue addressing the opioid crisis in North Carolina, using the North Carolina Opioid Action Plan 3.0, updated March 2021 with the input of community partners, as the guide.
The drug overdose rate has increased by 37% in the state since the start of the pandemic and the infiltration of manufactured highly potent opioids in the illegal drug supply. The action plan aims to prevent, reduce harm, and connect to care. The plan focuses on several key areas:
(1) Equity and Lived Experiences (Behavioral Health Equity)
(2) Preventing Future Opioid Addiction through Education
(3) Reducing Harm
(4) Connecting to Care by increasing treatment access for adults in rural areas, high-need urban areas, as well as those justice-involved (recovery-oriented)
(5) Expand access to housing and employment supports and recover from the pandemic together.
Efforts will be focused on activities that can realistically be accomplished within the time frame of the two-year grant. Objectives under each goal and their measures are described below.
Goal: Treat Opioid Use Disorder.
Objective: (1) To increase access to MAT/MOUD and other EBPs, among uninsured and under-insured North Carolinians for Federal Drug Administration (FDA)-approved medications, through fee-for-service treatments billed under the adult substance opioid use disorder target population.
Objective: (2) Provide services to transitioning populations by facilitating MOUD/MAT in correctional and detention facilities for individuals with opioid use disorders.
Goal: To increase community awareness, prevention, and education.
Objective: (1) Provide education to school-aged children, first responders, and key community sectors on opioid misuse.
Objective: (2) Increase secure storage of scheduled drugs and MOUD, through targeted media campaigns and providing medication lock boxes and chemical disposal kits.
Goal: To reduce overdose deaths through access to harm reduction supports.
Objective: (1) Reduce overdose deaths from drug use by supporting and funding the use of naloxone and fentanyl test strips through will funding three syringe service program (SSPS) equity navigation programs.
Goal: To implement recovery supports and services that aid in the initiation and maintenance of OUD treatment and recovery.
Objective: (1) Reduce barriers to engagement and retention in treatment and recovery.
Objective: (2) Provide linkages to recovery and support services.
Goal: To conduct a project evaluation.
Objective: (1) Contract with a consultant to evaluate SOR 3 performance.
Objective: (2) Routinely review the extent to which the project is meeting its goals and objectives at implementation meetings.
The proposed project plans to serve a minimum of 4,000 unduplicated participants in year 1 and an additional 3,000 in the second year of the grant. Because it is anticipated that some participants that began treatment in year 1 will continue in treatment into year 2, the number of new participants in year 2 is decreased. This will allow adequate funding in order that first-year participants may continue in treatment as long as necessary for a total of 7,000. Additionally, it is anticipated that an additional 500 individuals will be served through the proposed pilot initiatives each year.
The drug overdose rate has increased by 37% in the state since the start of the pandemic and the infiltration of manufactured highly potent opioids in the illegal drug supply. The action plan aims to prevent, reduce harm, and connect to care. The plan focuses on several key areas:
(1) Equity and Lived Experiences (Behavioral Health Equity)
(2) Preventing Future Opioid Addiction through Education
(3) Reducing Harm
(4) Connecting to Care by increasing treatment access for adults in rural areas, high-need urban areas, as well as those justice-involved (recovery-oriented)
(5) Expand access to housing and employment supports and recover from the pandemic together.
Efforts will be focused on activities that can realistically be accomplished within the time frame of the two-year grant. Objectives under each goal and their measures are described below.
Goal: Treat Opioid Use Disorder.
Objective: (1) To increase access to MAT/MOUD and other EBPs, among uninsured and under-insured North Carolinians for Federal Drug Administration (FDA)-approved medications, through fee-for-service treatments billed under the adult substance opioid use disorder target population.
Objective: (2) Provide services to transitioning populations by facilitating MOUD/MAT in correctional and detention facilities for individuals with opioid use disorders.
Goal: To increase community awareness, prevention, and education.
Objective: (1) Provide education to school-aged children, first responders, and key community sectors on opioid misuse.
Objective: (2) Increase secure storage of scheduled drugs and MOUD, through targeted media campaigns and providing medication lock boxes and chemical disposal kits.
Goal: To reduce overdose deaths through access to harm reduction supports.
Objective: (1) Reduce overdose deaths from drug use by supporting and funding the use of naloxone and fentanyl test strips through will funding three syringe service program (SSPS) equity navigation programs.
Goal: To implement recovery supports and services that aid in the initiation and maintenance of OUD treatment and recovery.
Objective: (1) Reduce barriers to engagement and retention in treatment and recovery.
Objective: (2) Provide linkages to recovery and support services.
Goal: To conduct a project evaluation.
Objective: (1) Contract with a consultant to evaluate SOR 3 performance.
Objective: (2) Routinely review the extent to which the project is meeting its goals and objectives at implementation meetings.
The proposed project plans to serve a minimum of 4,000 unduplicated participants in year 1 and an additional 3,000 in the second year of the grant. Because it is anticipated that some participants that began treatment in year 1 will continue in treatment into year 2, the number of new participants in year 2 is decreased. This will allow adequate funding in order that first-year participants may continue in treatment as long as necessary for a total of 7,000. Additionally, it is anticipated that an additional 500 individuals will be served through the proposed pilot initiatives each year.
Funding Goals
ADDRESSING THE OPIOID ABUSE CRISIS WITHIN SUCH STATES, USED FOR CARRYING OUT ACTIVITIES THAT SUPPLEMENT ACTIVITIES PERTAINING TO OPIOIDS UNDERTAKEN BY THE STATE AGENCY RESPONSIBLE FOR ADMINISTERING THE SUBSTANCE ABUSE PREVENTION AND TREATMENT BLOCK GRANT UNDER SUBPART II OF PART B OF TITLE XIX OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE ACT (42 U.S.C. 300X21 ET SEQ.), AND TRIBES AND TRIBAL ORGANIZATIONS TO ADDRESS THE OPIOID CRISIS WITHIN THEIR COMMUNITIES.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Raleigh,
North Carolina
27603
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been extended from 09/29/24 to 09/29/25 and the total obligations have increased 103% from $35,546,609 to $72,334,773.
North Carolina Department Of Health & Human Services was awarded
NC State Opioid Response: Addressing Crisis
Project Grant H79TI085757
worth $72,334,773
from the Division of Grants Management in September 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Raleigh North Carolina United States.
The grant
has a duration of 3 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.243 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Projects of Regional and National Significance.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity State Opioid Response Grants.
Status
(Complete)
Last Modified 1/21/25
Period of Performance
9/30/22
Start Date
9/29/25
End Date
Funding Split
$72.3M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$72.3M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for H79TI085757
Transaction History
Modifications to H79TI085757
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
H79TI085757
SAI Number
H79TI085757-796072337
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
State Government
Awarding Office
75SAMH SAMHSA DIVISION OF GRANTS MANAGEMENT
Funding Office
75MT00 SAMHSA CENTER FOR SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT
Awardee UEI
DKT3LLBWFVL3
Awardee CAGE
1W8J9
Performance District
NC-90
Senators
Thom Tillis
Ted Budd
Ted Budd
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Substance Abuse Treatment, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, Health and Human Services (075-1364) | Health care services | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $72,334,773 | 100% |
Modified: 1/21/25