Notre Dame to convene federal, state and nonprofit leaders to address national opioid crisis
Across the United States, the opioid epidemic has devastated communities as opioid-related deaths have skyrocketed. According to data from the National Vital Statistics System and the CDC Wonder Database, the opioid death rate rose by 2,473 percent between 1979 and 2022.
To hold drug manufacturers and distributors accountable for the rise in fatalities, states and local political subdivisions brought lawsuits against major pharmaceutical distributors, manufacturers and pharmacy chains, reaching settlements that total nearly $50 billion to date.
The National Opioids Settlement and other settlement agreements have created a sense of hope for families and communities affected by the opioid crisis and provided a profound opportunity for states across the nation to begin to repair the damage the epidemic has wrought.
On Aug. 5-6, the University of Notre Dame will convene A Pathway to Hope: Summit on the National Opioids Settlement to bring together elected officials, academic researchers and other federal, state and nonprofit organization leaders from across the country to discuss and develop evidence-based strategies to most effectively distribute the opioid lawsuit settlement funds. The summit’s presentations will focus on framing the overall opioid crisis, its impact on communities and families, and potential solutions backed by evidence. The goal is to find ways to maximize the funds’ impact on the families and communities affected by the opioid crisis.
Led by Notre Dame’s Poverty Initiative, the summit will explore how evidence-based practices can inform decisions and ensure that settlement funds best help the victims.
“A primary goal of the Poverty Initiative, which launched last fall, is to bring faculty together with policymakers, philanthropists and providers to discover new pathways to break the cycle of poverty,” said economics professor Jim Sullivan, who also serves as the director of the Poverty Initiative and the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities.
“The Pathway to Hope Summit embodies that mission as the University will convene some of the nation’s leading experts to find solutions to the opioid crisis that has afflicted families all across this country.”
Sullivan and his team expect one unique outcome of the summit to be a co-created research agenda led by Notre Dame faculty to work with people on the frontlines to ensure the approaches are accurate, scalable and effective.
The Pathway to Hope Summit is an invitation-only event. More information is available at pathwaytohope.nd.edu.
Contact: Sue Ryan, Executive Director of Media Relations, sue.ryan@nd.edu; 269-377-5983
Tracy DeStazio, Associate Director of Media Relations, tdestazi@nd.edu; 269-769-8804
Brandi Wampler, Associate Director of Media Relations, brandiwampler@nd.edu; 574-248-0428
Originally published by news.nd.edu on July 19, 2024.
atLatest Research
- Habitat partnership bears fruit for homebuyers in South BendJoel Gibbs was about five years into his job as a maintenance technician at the University of Notre Dame when the message arrived in his inbox. “Find out if you qualify to build a new home with Habitat,” read the headline in the March 7, 2023, edition of NDWorks Weekly, the weekly…
- Former U.S. Department of State Official Uzra Zeya Added to Kroc Institute Advisory Board in 2025Uzra Zeya, most recently the Under Secretary for Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights for the U.S. Department of State, has joined the advisory board of the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, part of the Keough…
- Notre Dame business school and College of Engineering to launch new double majorMendoza students currently in their first year at Notre Dame will be able to apply for the double major when they declare their majors.
- A Wider Path to Notre DameMore than 100 international students arrive at Notre Dame each August for their first year of college. Some…
- Notre Dame Students Acknowledged in National Report on Wage Theft by the Economic Policy InstituteNOTRE DAME, IN.— Students with the Notre Dame Student Policy Network (SPN) were recognized in a new report by the Economic Policy Institute, a leading nonpartisan think tank dedicated to countering economic…
- Notre Dame selected as ACS Bridge Department, expanding opportunities for students in chemistry and biochemistryThe University of Notre Dame’s Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry has been named an American Chemical Society (ACS) Bridge Department, an honor recognizing the University's dedication to providing targeted support to students from historically marginalized groups who are pursuing graduate degrees…