Abstract

Oregon officials would have to double the current availability of services in order to do an adequate job of meeting the needs of state residents with substance use disorders (SUDs), suggests a gap analysis conducted by the Oregon Health & Science University–Portland State University School of Public Health (OHSU-PSU School of Public Health). The analysis, covering the one-year period from September 2021 to last month, found that even the harm reduction services that have been prioritized in Oregon since voters’ 2020 approval of Measure 110 are falling short, with a 58% gap in the availability of syringe service programs statewide.

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