NH28CE003554
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
City of New Haven OD2A-Local Overdose Prevention - The City of New Haven Health Department, in collaboration with Waterbury Health Department, proposes to develop and implement overdose prevention, harm reduction, and linkage to and retention in care activities, and create overdose and linkage to care surveillance infrastructures to improve conditions in New Haven County, CT.
New Haven County drug overdose deaths are increasing, with 488 overdose deaths in 2022. While increases are seen across all racial/ethnic groups, recent increases were highest among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic populations.
In addition, New Haven and Waterbury, the county's two largest cities, have been hit particularly hard by the opioid overdose epidemic. While the program will serve all residents who are using opioids, it focuses on Black and Hispanic residents; persons re-entering the community from incarceration; and persons experiencing homelessness.
The City of New Haven is submitting this proposal under Component A (Prevention) and Component C (Surveillance) funding. The project builds upon a strong foundation of cooperation and partnership across public health, behavioral health, health systems, community organizations, and public safety in order to build an overdose infrastructure and cohesive program with multiple access points and address health inequities in overdose and SUD treatment.
Project goals and related outcomes include:
1) Decrease or destabilization of fatal overdose rate;
2) Decrease or stabilization of non-fatal overdose rates;
3) Development of a comprehensive, county-wide community outreach system;
4) Improved health equity through increased outreach and linkages to care and support services to address the social determinants of health (SDOH);
5) Increased adoption of harm reduction strategies across service sectors;
6) Increased adoption of stigma reduction across sectors;
7) Implementation of an improved region-wide overdose surveillance system;
8) Improved coordinated and timely response to novel overdose trends and spikes;
9) Development of data-sharing agreements with the state agencies to obtain prescription data; and
10) Increased clinician prescribing of naloxone.
Strategies to achieve these goals and outcomes include:
1) Linkage and retention to care;
2) Harm reduction activities;
3) Stigma reduction activities;
4) Implementation of clinician and health system best practices; and
5) Development and implementation of an overdose surveillance infrastructure which will improve the region's ability to monitor non-fatal drug overdoses at regional emergency departments and hospitals, leverage the region's existing emergency medical services data collection system to calculate drug overdose indicators, and communicate surveillance results to key stakeholders at the state and local levels.
New Haven County drug overdose deaths are increasing, with 488 overdose deaths in 2022. While increases are seen across all racial/ethnic groups, recent increases were highest among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic populations.
In addition, New Haven and Waterbury, the county's two largest cities, have been hit particularly hard by the opioid overdose epidemic. While the program will serve all residents who are using opioids, it focuses on Black and Hispanic residents; persons re-entering the community from incarceration; and persons experiencing homelessness.
The City of New Haven is submitting this proposal under Component A (Prevention) and Component C (Surveillance) funding. The project builds upon a strong foundation of cooperation and partnership across public health, behavioral health, health systems, community organizations, and public safety in order to build an overdose infrastructure and cohesive program with multiple access points and address health inequities in overdose and SUD treatment.
Project goals and related outcomes include:
1) Decrease or destabilization of fatal overdose rate;
2) Decrease or stabilization of non-fatal overdose rates;
3) Development of a comprehensive, county-wide community outreach system;
4) Improved health equity through increased outreach and linkages to care and support services to address the social determinants of health (SDOH);
5) Increased adoption of harm reduction strategies across service sectors;
6) Increased adoption of stigma reduction across sectors;
7) Implementation of an improved region-wide overdose surveillance system;
8) Improved coordinated and timely response to novel overdose trends and spikes;
9) Development of data-sharing agreements with the state agencies to obtain prescription data; and
10) Increased clinician prescribing of naloxone.
Strategies to achieve these goals and outcomes include:
1) Linkage and retention to care;
2) Harm reduction activities;
3) Stigma reduction activities;
4) Implementation of clinician and health system best practices; and
5) Development and implementation of an overdose surveillance infrastructure which will improve the region's ability to monitor non-fatal drug overdoses at regional emergency departments and hospitals, leverage the region's existing emergency medical services data collection system to calculate drug overdose indicators, and communicate surveillance results to key stakeholders at the state and local levels.
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Funding Agency
Place of Performance
South Central Connecticut,
Connecticut
United States
Geographic Scope
County-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 185% from $2,104,447 to $5,988,373.
City Of New Haven was awarded
New Haven County Overdose Prevention & Surveillance Program
Cooperative Agreement NH28CE003554
worth $5,988,373
from Injury Center in September 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Connecticut United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.136 Injury Prevention and Control Research and State and Community Based Programs.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity Overdose Data to Action: Limiting Overdose through Collaborative Actions in Localities (OD2A: LOCAL).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 9/5/25
Period of Performance
9/1/23
Start Date
8/31/28
End Date
Funding Split
$6.0M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$6.0M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to NH28CE003554
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
NH28CE003554
SAI Number
NH28CE003554-1924947317
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
City Or Township Government
Awarding Office
75CDC1 CDC Office of Financial Resources
Funding Office
75CUH0 CDC NATIONAL CENTER FOR INJURY PREVENTION AND CONTROL
Awardee UEI
K8WBCLJ9DVD8
Awardee CAGE
3B0M2
Performance District
CT-03
Senators
Richard Blumenthal
Christopher Murphy
Christopher Murphy
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health and Human Services (075-0952) | Health care services | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $2,104,447 | 100% |
Modified: 9/5/25