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'Addiction does not discriminate': Record number of opioid overdose deaths

Opioid addiction is unfortunately spiking once again. Erie County Health Department data says 2023 was the deadliest year with nearly 400 opioid overdose deaths.

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Though gay men are most at risk, health experts warn not to think of monkeypox as 'gay disease'

For many in the LGBTQ community, the emergence of monkeypox is drawing parallels to another major public health crisis that was first dismissed as a “gay disease,” until heterosexuals began contracting it. Health experts say while the risk remains very low for most people, it’s unwise to dismiss monkeypox as an illness passed exclusively by homosexual contact, or exclusively by any sexual contact.

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New York state budget delays 340B 'carve-out' for two years


Tom Dinki/WBFO file photo
The 2021 New York state budget will push the impending 340B “carve-out” to 2023, providing something of a victory for health care providers who had said they stood to lose millions of dollars.
 
Federally Qualified Health Centers, or FQHCs, provide care for people of color, refugees, people living with HIV-Aids and the LGBTQ+ community. A federal program, known as 340B, allows FQHCs to get a discount on prescription drug prices for their Medicaid patients, and reinvest those savings into services. An impending state law passed last year, known as a 340B carve-out, would allow New York state to keep the savings for itself. 

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340B 'carve-out' to cost millions for WNY's Federally Qualified Health Centers

340B 'carve-out' to cost millions for WNY's Federally Qualified Health Centers
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Will NY decriminalize clean syringe possession?



As COVID-19 rampages across New York, many localities are confronting another public health disaster: drastic spikes in drug overdoses and new cases of HIV. Fatal overdoses have doubled relative to last year in Albany and Onondaga County, and in 2020 the Rochester area reported more new cases of HIV than had been reported during the previous four years. 
Yet medical professions say that widespread access to sterile syringes, a key tool for combatting both problems, is greatly hampered by the fact that the vast majority of New Yorkers cannot legally possess syringes. 
Under New York law, syringe possession is a class-A misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail and a monetary fine. Thousands of New Yorkers have been arrested for syringe possession over the past decade, mostly on Long Island and upstate, according to data obtained by New York Focus/City & State from the Division of Criminal Justice Services. Public health experts and harm reduction advocates say that these arrests, and the fear and stigma they perpetuate, are major obstacles to efforts to curb the spread of infectious disease, protect the health of drug users, and connect users with services to help them break their addictions.

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