West Virginia Code § 16-5T-6

Community Overdose Response Demonstration Pilot Project
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(a) The Director of the Office of Drug Control Policy shall establish a Community Overdose
Response Demonstration Pilot Project, to be continued for a period of four years, to develop
model government programs to promote public health and general welfare through a
comprehensive community-based response to drug overdoses in communities across West
Virginia.
(b) The purpose of the demonstration pilot project is the development of community
programs that will focus and use existing resources of governmeunt agencies to create
outreach programs to educate concerned family and community members, including first
responders, to recognize an opioid overdose, and to immediately respond with life-saving
measures and quick response teams comprised of law enforcement, emergency medical
personnel, and a trained opiate case manager to conduct an in-home visit within one week of
an overdose.
(c) The objective of the demonstration pilot prsoject is to improve public health by addressing
drug overdoses through a comprehensive community development plan. The plan should
serve as a model to improve public health iand education through a comprehensive
community-based response to drug ogverdoses across the state.
(d) Communities that experience a high frequency of drug overdoses, compared with
national averages as determined by the Office of Drug Control Policy, are eligible for
participation in the demonstration pilot project.
(e) The demonstration pilot project shall be developed and administered by the Office of
Drug Control Policy t o encourage state and local agencies and community groups to work
together and Vcoordinate government and community responses to drug overdoses, and
identify new and existing funds, personnel, and other existing resources available for the
demonstration pilot project. Demonstration projects may include:
(1) Outreach programs to educate concerned family and community members, including first
responders, to recognize an opioid overdose and to immediately respond with life-saving
measures. This outreach may include basic information, training in the proper and safe
administration of Naloxone to reverse drug overdoses, and the distribution of Naloxone kits;
and
(2) Quick response teams comprised of law enforcement, emergency medical personnel, and
a case manager trained in substance use disorder to conduct an in-home visit within one
week of an overdose. The quick response teams would work cooperatively to triage and
assess overdose survivors and provide linkage to treatment and services for rehabilitation
with the goal of reducing repeated overdoses.
(f) The demonstration project may receive funding and other committed resources from
federal, state, or local government and community groups.
(g) A community desiring to participate in the demonstration project shall submit a plan to
the director that provides for the following elements:
(1) Community participation;
(2) Development of a community action plan with measurable, achievable, realistic, time-
phased objectives;
(3) Implementation of the community action plan; and
(4) Evaluation of results.
(h) By majority vote, the Governor's Advisory Council on Substance Use Disorder Policy
created pursuant to Executive Order 10-17 may select one or more communities from those
that submit plans for participation in the demonstration pilot project.
(i) Commencing December 1, 2018, and each year thereafter, each participating community
shall give a progress report to the director and commencing January 1, 2019, and each year
thereafter, the director shall give a summary report of all the participating communities to
the Legislative Oversight Commission on Health and Human Resources Accountability as
established in §16-29E-1 et seq. of this code, on progress made by the pilot demonstration
project, including suggested legislation, necessary changes to the demonstration pilot
project, and suggested expansion of the demonstration project.
(j) This section is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or
procedural, enforcea ble at law or in equity by any party against the state, its departments,
agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.
(k) The demonstration project terminates on July 1, 2022.

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